As a single mom, I worked for years to save money for my daughter Sydney’s college. Her father, Gale, left us when she was a baby and told me I’d crawl back one day. I promised myself I never would. Then one evening, I came home to find our house broken into. Nothing was taken—except the bag with all of Sydney’s college savings. I was crushed.
The next day, I received flowers at work. No name—just a note: “Told you I’d come in handy someday. Meet me at the café at 6 p.m.”I went. And there was Gale. He offered to pay for Sydney’s tuition—in exchange for joint custody. I was furious. But when I told Sydney, she shocked me. “If it gets me into college, you should say yes,” she said.
I reluctantly agreed. But on the day of the custody hearing, I overheard him talking to his lawyer—and the truth hit me hard: he had staged the robbery to manipulate me. Worse, he planned to drain the inheritance his grandmother left Sydney.
I confronted him, called the police, and Gale was arrested. The money was returned, and his custody bid denied. That night, Sydney and I sat quietly with the recovered bag of cash. “You’re all set for college,” I said. “Thanks, Mom,” she whispered, resting her head on my shoulder. We were back to just us—and stronger than ever.