I gave up my youth to raise my five siblings after our parents passed away—then one day, my boyfriend looked at me, shaken, and said, “I found something in your youngest sister’s room. Please don’t panic… and don’t call the police.” I have five siblings—two brothers and three sisters. My youngest is thirteen now, but in my mind, she’s still that little one-year-old who used to cling to me. Nearly twelve years ago, we lost our parents. They were crossing the street in broad daylight when a drunk driver hit them. In a single moment, everything was gone. I had just turned eighteen. Old enough, people said, to make decisions. Old enough to choose what would happen to my family. “You’re still kids yourselves,” the social worker told me, flipping through her papers. “Foster care might be the best solution.” But when I looked at my nine-year-old brother trying to comfort a crying baby, I knew there was only one choice I could live with. From that day forward, I became everything they needed—their sister, their parent, their safe place. I learned how to braid hair before sunrise and check for fevers in the middle of the night. Our parents had left a small amount of savings, enough to get us through at first. I gave up college and found remote work so I could stay home with them—making lunches, helping with homework, listening to their stories after school. Years passed like that. While people my age were going out, building relationships, living their lives—I was raising five children. And I never regretted it. As they grew older and more independent, and I turned thirty, I finally allowed myself to think about my own life again. That’s when I met Andrew. He’s kind, easygoing, and an only child—which is probably why he loved the noise and chaos of my family. One afternoon, while the kids were at school, he was helping me clean the house. Nothing unusual. Just vacuuming the younger girls’ room. Then he came to me. Pale. “I found something in your youngest sister’s room,” he said quietly, his voice unsteady. “Please don’t panic… and don’t call the police.”

That’s when I realized—there was more to this than I thought.

The door opened behind her. One by one, the others walked in.

“We heard everything,” Noah said. “We were going to tell you… just not yet.”

I looked at them, confused. “Tell me what?”

Lily took a breath. “Mrs. Lewis found her ring. She said it didn’t fit anymore and planned to sell it.”

“Then why is it here?”

“Because… we wanted to buy it.”

That still didn’t make sense.

“Why?” I asked.

Lily glanced at Andrew, then back at me.

“Because he doesn’t have one,” she said softly.
The room went still.

“And you always put yourself last,” Maya added.

“For everything,” Jake said.

Noah looked at me. “You never choose yourself, Bree.”

“And we didn’t want you to keep doing that,” Lily finished.

My chest tightened.

“The money… where did you get it?”

They exchanged looks.

“We earned it,” Noah admitted.

Jake had been mowing lawns. Maya walked dogs. Sophie helped neighbors. Noah babysat. Lily worked with Mrs. Lewis.

They had been saving… for me.