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But it was the third message that stopped Leo. It wasn't an offer; it was a story.

First came "Slugger88," a local collector who wanted to meet at a diner with a briefcase of cash. Then "TheCurator," a high-end auction house representative from Chicago offering a professional appraisal and a guaranteed slot in their summer catalog.

Leo deleted the public listing. He typed a single reply to Elias: "The card is off the market. Send me your address—we need to talk about a fair price that doesn't involve a pension fund."

The digital world of "baseball card buyers online" was full of algorithms and profit margins, but that night, it was just two people sharing a piece of history.

He looked back at the scan of the card. He remembered his father telling him that baseball wasn't about the stats on the back of the card, but the people you watched the game with.

"My name is Elias," the message read. "In 1955, my brother and I traded a Mantle just like this for a handful of marbles and a bike tire. We’ve regretted it for seventy years. I’m not a big-time 'baseball card buyer online' with a corporate budget, but I’ve saved my pension for three years to find one more. I don't want to flip it. I want to put it in a frame next to his photo."

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