After my mom died when I was 16, grief filled our home like silence. She’d been sick for years—fighting lupus with turmeric smoothies, handwritten notes, and unwavering love. Even after my father left her during her worst days, she never stopped caring for us. She also never stopped saving for our college futures. But when she passed, everything changed. Because Ethan and I were underage, Mom had to name our father, Richard, as custodian of our inheritance. She had no choice—and I think that broke her heart even before she died.
I moved into his cold, too-clean house, where his new wife offered chamomile tea and his love felt like a formality. I kept to myself, holding on to my college dreams. Then one day, with zero emotion, my father told me: “I already gave your college fund to your brother.” Just like that—gone. He said Ethan “deserved it more.” Because I didn’t love him. Because I reminded him of Mom.
So I left. I packed a bag, went to my grandmother’s, and we called a lawyer. What followed was a quiet court battle that proved he had misused not just my college fund, but also what was left of Mom’s savings. Spa days. Gadgets. Luxury coffee machines. All paid for with the money my mother saved for my future.
Three weeks before I turned 18, the judge ruled in my favor. The money was returned, he was removed as guardian, and my aunt took over.Now I’m in college. I study hard, drink turmeric smoothies, and keep Mom’s recipe list pinned to my fridge. I don’t answer when Richard calls. Because this was never about revenge. It was about keeping a promise. Mom told me once: You’re allowed to take up space—even when people try to make you feel small.” So I did. In court. In college. In life. And I carry her with me, always.