I always thought betrayal came from strangers, not from the people who were supposed to love you the most. But I learned differently when I discovered that my own mother and stepfather had stolen from me, the one thing my late father had left behind to ensure my future. It started when I was nineteen.
I had just finished my first year at college, majoring in architecture. My dad, who passed away when I was thirteen, had been a careful man. He worked as an engineer and always emphasized the importance of planning for the future.
Before he died, he set up a trust fund in my name. The terms were simple: I could access the money when I turned eighteen, but my mom would serve as the temporary trustee until then. My dad wanted me to use that inheritance for education, a home, or starting a business, something meaningful.
He wanted me to have the foundation he never had when he was my age. I trusted that his wishes would be respected. But I couldn’t have been more wrong.
When my mom remarried two years after Dad’s death, I tried to accept it. Her new husband, Gerald, wasn’t outright cruel, but there was always this sense that he looked at me as a burden. He was one of those men who believed blood only mattered if it was his own.
At first, I brushed it off. I told myself I was imagining it. He provided for the household, and my mom seemed happier than she had been in years.
But as time went on, I noticed how often Gerald complained about money, about how expensive it was to raise a teenager, about how “tight” things were with bills. I always wondered if he saw my inheritance as a solution long before I knew it was gone. When I turned eighteen, I asked my mom about the trust fund.
She told me that the money was still “being managed” and that it wasn’t the right time to touch it yet. “It’ll be there when you really need it,” she said, brushing me off. I didn’t push too hard at first because I trusted her.
I was still grieving Dad in many ways, and I wanted to believe she would honor his memory. But by the time I was nineteen, things weren’t adding up. My college tuition had become a struggle.
I was working part-time at a café to cover books and daily expenses, even though I knew Dad had left more than enough for me to live and study comfortably. One evening, while scrolling through social media, I stumbled upon a post my mom had shared. It was a picture of a large, modern two-story house with a big backyard.
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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