When my husband Greg suggested using my daughter Ava’s college fund left by her late father David to pay for his adult daughter Becca’s wedding, I was stunned. That money was David’s final gift to Ava, a promise he made before cancer took him too soon. She was only ten when he passed, and he’d quietly saved so she could have a future filled with choices.
Becca, on the other hand, had never accepted us. She wasn’t openly cruel just cold. Distant. She treated Ava and me like burdens, only speaking when she needed something. So when Greg brought up using Ava’s fund over dinner, with Becca sitting smugly across the table, it felt like a betrayal.“She’s only 16,” Greg said. “She’s smart she’ll figure college out. Family helps family.”But Becca had never treated Ava like family. And stealing her future for a one-day event wasn’t something I could overlook.
I stayed calm. I nodded and said I’d think about it. Two days later, I handed Greg two documents:
One was a contract he could take the money only if he agreed to pay back every cent within a year.
The other? Divorce papers. His face dropped. “You’d divorce me over this?” “I’d divorce you to protect Ava’s future,” I said. Greg moved out two weeks later. Becca’s wedding was smaller, funded by her biological mother and whatever Greg could gather.
Ava and I weren’t invited. That night, Ava hugged me tightly, her voice trembling as she whispered, “Thank you for choosing me.” And I always will. That money was never for a wedding it was for Ava’s dreams. For the life her father wanted her to have. And I’ll guard it with everything I have.