My mother meant everything to me, and when cancer took her away, she left behind memories and a lifeline — a trust fund meant to support my future. When my dad began selfishly using it for his stepdaughter, it felt like he was chipping away at Mom’s memory piece by piece. I couldn’t allow him to steal what little I had left of her — or of myself.
There’s something about losing someone you love deeply — you carry that emptiness forever, even if it doesn’t show on the outside. I lost my mom to ovarian cancer when I was ten. One day, she was there, brushing my hair while humming an old folk tune, and the next, she was just… gone.
Just like that. I remember our last conversation as vividly as if it happened yesterday. She was sitting on her hospital bed, her frail fingers softly weaving through my hair.
“Promise me something, my little moon,” she whispered. “Anything, Mama,” I said, swallowing back my tears. “Promise me you’ll never let anyone dim your light.
You’re special, Margo. So special.”
She didn’t leave me with much — just a few photographs, the gentle scent of her jasmine perfume lingering on her scarves, and a trust fund she set up before she passed. “This is for Margo,” she had told my father and my grandparents firmly.
“For her education, her dreams, and her future. Promise me she’ll always have it.”
They promised. My father promised, too.
But promises don’t hold weight when there’s no one left to enforce them. Two years later, my dad remarried. His new wife, Lucy, came with her own package: a thirteen-year-old daughter named Stuart.
I didn’t resent them at first. Mom was gone, and I thought maybe this new family might help patch up some of that emptiness. But I quickly realized how things would really play out in that house: Stuart first, Lucy second, Dad floating somewhere in the background, and me?
I might as well have been a ghost. It began with small things. The fridge and water heater broke down one summer.
Dad dipped into my trust fund without asking to fix them. “I’ll put it back,” he said casually, as though it was nothing. A week later, he bought Stuart a brand-new laptop for her birthday.
On mine? A $75 gift card. It wasn’t about the dollar amount.
It was the message behind it. Over the years, he kept tapping into the fund — for car repairs, home improvements, Stuart’s competitions — things that had absolutely nothing to do with me. “It’s just temporary,” he always said.
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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