The bag wasn’t a treasure chest, at least not in the way anyone would hope. No cash spilled out, no glittering secrets, just a single slip of paper that turned a lost object into an unexpected mirror. It held a name, an address, and a purchase so expensive it felt almost unreal, the kind of luxury you assume belongs to someone who never worries about being enough.
Keeping the bag wasn’t about theft; it became an awkward gift from fate. The narrator carried it into interviews, clutching borrowed status while relying on their own unpolished courage. The leather didn’t change their résumé, but it changed how they entered a room—chin higher, voice steadier, eyes meeting eyes. Years later, the bag is scuffed, but sacred: a reminder that sometimes we need a prop before we realize the power was ours all along—and a quiet promise to be that unseen boost for someone else.