Growing up, I believed my grandfather was the ultimate miser. He reused everything, rationed electricity, complained endlessly about prices, and turned even simple outings into lessons on frugality. Christmas gifts were always clearance socks, and dinners out meant pocketed sugar packets and embarrassment. To me, his obsession with saving money felt joyless and small, something I vowed never to imitate.
When he died, those feelings shaped my expectations. While other relatives inherited cars, bonds, and land, I received a sealed envelope labeled just for me. Inside was a single coupon: $100 off any in-store purchase, no expiration date, printed on thick ivory paper with a strange triangular logo. It felt like a final joke, a cheap gesture that perfectly summed him up.
Out of curiosity more than hope, I eventually visited the store listed on the coupon. It was a forgotten place in a rundown strip mall, filled with buzzing lights and generic goods. At checkout, everything changed. The cashier froze when she touched the coupon, and the manager urgently escorted me to a back office.
There, I learned the truth. The coupon was one of five ever created in the 1970s as part of a secret experiment. These “legacy coupons” didn’t guarantee wealth but unlocked paths of possibility. My grandfather had been one of the original recipients. Others had stumbled into extraordinary lives—or vanished entirely.
Back on the sales floor, I noticed an antique camera priced at $99.99. I bought it using the coupon. That night, I discovered it didn’t capture memories but alternate possibilities. Photographs subtly altered reality, revealing branching futures rather than fixed moments.
In my grandfather’s journal, I finally understood him. He lived quietly to avoid attention, guarding this power until he could pass it on. His greatest gift wasn’t money, but choice—the ability to see what could be. And with that, I stepped into the fifth path he had been protecting all along.