When my husband Greg suggested using my daughter Ava’s college fund—left by her late father—for his daughter Becca’s $30,000 wedding,
I was stunned. That money was a promise for Ava’s future, not a one-day event. I stayed calm but quietly planned my response.
Ava was just ten when I remarried. Her father’s death left her the fund as security for her dreams. Blending families was never easy; Becca,
already an adult, kept her distance. At dinner, when Greg raised the idea, Becca’s silence felt like approval, as if they’d already decided.
I told Greg I’d “think about it” but returned with a condition: I’d write the check only if they signed a contract to repay every
cent within a year. The atmosphere shifted. Greg objected, Becca scoffed. They had counted on my compliance, not boundaries.
Calmly, I produced a second document: divorce papers. I told Greg, “If you can’t protect Ava’s future, I will—with or without you.”
Two weeks later, Greg moved out. Becca’s wedding went ahead, modest and funded elsewhere. Ava and I weren’t invited,
but it didn’t matter. I kept my promise to her father. That night, Ava hugged me—grateful I chose her future over a broken peace.