I got married at the age of 30, with nothing. My wife’s family was not well off at that time, with only her father-in-law, Mr. Chien, nearly 70 years old, thin, quiet, living on a pension for meritorious people.
Right after the wedding, he moved in with my wife and I and stayed there for the rest of his life. For 20 years , he did not contribute a single penny for electricity, water, food or medicine. He did not look after his grandchildren, cook or clean. Some people even called him a “high-class parasite”.
I was sometimes angry, but I thought, “If I blame my father-in-law, who will take care of him?”, so I endured it. But honestly, I was often upset. Sometimes I came home tired from work, opened the empty refrigerator, and saw him still sitting there leisurely drinking tea as if nothing had happened.
Then one day, he was gone — and I thought that was it…
He passed away quietly at the age of 89. He was not seriously ill, nor was he hospitalized. That morning, my wife cooked porridge and brought it up, only to discover that he was no longer breathing. I didn’t have much emotion — partly because he was old, and partly because… I was used to his presence like a shadow in the house.
The funeral was simple. My wife’s family was not rich, so my wife and I took care of everything.
Three days later, a man in a suit showed up at my door — and almost made me drop my drink.
He was a lawyer, carrying a stack of documents. After verifying my identity, he handed me a red folder and said:
“According to Mr. Chien’s will, you are the one who inherits all of his personal property.”
I smiled faintly, thinking he was joking. “What assets? He has lived off my family for twenty years and doesn’t even have a pair of good slippers.”
But the lawyer seriously opened each page:
A 115m² plot of land right in the town center, transferred to his name 2 years ago.
A savings book worth more than 3.2 billion VND , in my name as the beneficiary.
A handwritten letter, kept by a lawyer:
“This son-in-law is a grumbler, but he has raised me for 20 years without missing a meal. My daughter is lazy, so she has to take care of everything. I have lived a long life, and I know who is good and who is not. He doesn’t need me to repay him, but I can’t die without leaving him anything.”
I stood there, stunned, tears welling up without knowing why.
It turned out that he was not poor at all. That land was his ancestral land, and he kept it a secret, never saying a word. His savings account was the money he had saved his entire life from benefits and pensions with compound interest, and he had never touched a penny.
He chose to give it to me — the person who thought he was a “freeloader” and wanted him to move out.
That night, I sat alone in front of the altar, lighting incense. Looking at his portrait with a toothless smile, I whispered:
“I was wrong, Dad…”
“My whole life, I lived quietly, not letting anyone owe me anything — even those who thought I was a burden.”