When our daughter Ava was born, my husband Greg and I promised to secure her future. Our families contributed $23,000. I worked overtime and added another $22,000. Greg had one job: deposit the $45,000 into a college savings account. Instead, he bought a 1972 Ford Bronco.
I found out after a 12-hour hospital shift. He grinned like a kid as I stared at the rusty truck parked in our driveway. “It’s an investment,” he said. “It’ll be worth double in 20 years.” I kicked him out the next morning.
His parents were furious. Mine were heartbroken. Greg called nonstop. Three days later, he returned without the truck. “I sold it. Got $38,000. It’s in Ava’s account now,” he said, handing me a bank slip. “And the rest?” “I’ll earn it back. Extra shifts, whatever it takes.”
He apologized to everyone our parents, even wrote a letter to Ava. I let him crash on the couch, but the message was clear: “You won’t get another chance. Choose her, or lose us both.” Now he works double shifts, rebuilding trust dollar by dollar. I don’t know if I’ll ever fully forgive him. But I do know this: my daughter deserves better. And so do I.