Lucky Charm
What would you do if money started appearing out of nowhere — not once, but again and again? Caleb, a gentle and honest soul, finds himself at the center of an unexplained mystery on his terrace. This short story explores wonder, fear, and the quiet magic of life that disappears the moment we try to explain it.
Caleb lived a quiet life. He was soft-spoken, gentle, and known in the neighborhood for always telling the truth — even when it didn’t benefit him. His days followed a peaceful rhythm: work in the morning, a jog in the afternoon, and music in the evening. But it was the terrace he loved most.
That little open space on the rooftop was his retreat. He’d go up each evening, water the green chilies and baby tomatoes he’d planted in ceramic pots, and sit with a cup of tea, watching the sun slide behind the buildings. The terrace smelled of earth and sky, and to Caleb, that was comfort.
One ordinary Tuesday, as he bent down to check on a sprouting tomato plant, he spotted something odd — a dollar bill, lying flat on the tiled floor. He picked it up, frowning slightly. Maybe the wind had carried it in? There were no footsteps, no envelope, no note.
The next day, two more bills appeared — neatly folded, waiting by the railing. A week passed. More money. Always in ones or fives, never large, and always clean, like it had just been printed.
At first, Caleb was amused. “Well, thank you,” he said aloud, holding up a bill to the evening sky. He thought someone might be playing a harmless prank, or perhaps it was some bizarre coincidence. But as the weeks rolled on, the money kept coming — and his jar, now placed near the terrace door, began to fill.
He didn’t tell anyone. It felt too strange to explain.
But eventually, the wonder turned to worry.
One night, under the dim glow of the terrace light, Caleb stared at the jar now heavy with bills. “What am I supposed to do with all this money?” he whispered. “I didn’t earn it. It just keeps coming.”
He thought of sharing it — maybe giving it to a food bank or an orphanage. Maybe even telling someone, just to make sense of it.
The next morning, the terrace was bare.
No dollar. No trace.
He shrugged it off. “Maybe it’s done now,” he said, trying not to feel disappointed. But the following day — still nothing. A week passed. The money had stopped.
Caleb checked the corners, the pots, even under the welcome mat he’d placed for himself. Nothing.
He hadn’t spent a single bill. He had only wondered what to do with it, and in the moment he considered sharing it — it vanished.
That’s when the fear came. Was it real at all? Had he imagined it? Was the money some kind of test, or a gift that only lasted as long as he kept it secret?
He moved the jar inside, hiding it behind books on his shelf. Every now and then, he’d glance at it, wondering whether he should have done something different — or whether the terrace itself had been the charm.
But the sky still glowed orange each evening. The tomatoes still grew.
Only the magic had gone.
Sometimes life gives us small wonders — things we can’t explain, moments that feel like gifts without a sender. Lucky Charm was inspired by that idea: the quiet magic that enters our lives when we least expect it, and the questions that come when it disappears.
If you’ve ever had something strange, beautiful, or unexplainable happen in your life, you’re not alone. Maybe it’s not about what we do with those moments — but how we remember them.
“Some things are more beautiful because they don’t last — and more powerful because they remain a mystery.”
Do you all agree with Caleb’s decision on moving to you new home?
ReplyDeleteI think he should have stayed in the old home to Collect more money.
ReplyDelete