My Husband’s Daughter Needed Costly Therapy After an Accident – A Year Later I Found Out Where the Money Really Went

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I sacrificed my dreams and life savings to help my stepdaughter recover from a bike accident. No price is too high to help a child walk again, right? I trusted my husband with my money.

A year later, I was shaken when I found out where the cash really went.

When I married Travis three years ago, I thought I’d found my forever person. He talked about his daughter Lily with such warmth, and his eyes would light up whenever her name came up.

She was 10 when I first met her at Glendale Park. She was a shy and sweet little thing, always hugging his leg and whispering “Daddy” in that soft voice kids use when they’re nervous around new people.

“She’s everything to me, Mia,” Travis would say, watching her play on the swings.

“After her mom and I split, she became my whole world.”

I respected that he kept our relationship separate from his parenting time.

When I suggested Lily come over for dinner, he’d shake his head gently. “Her mother prefers things this way.

I don’t want to complicate custody arrangements.”

I didn’t push it. I wanted to be the understanding stepmom who didn’t force anything.

Then everything changed with one phone call.

“Mia, something terrible happened,” Travis said, his voice cracking through the phone.

“Lily had a bike accident yesterday. She hurt her leg really badly.”

My heart dropped. “Oh my God, is she okay?

Which hospital?

I can meet you there.”

“Only parents are allowed to see her. She’s stable, but the doctors say she needs extensive physiotherapy.

Months of it, maybe longer. Her leg…

they’re not sure if she’ll ever walk normally again without serious intervention.”

After that call, everything in our house revolved around Lily’s recovery.

Travis would come home from visiting her, looking defeated. He’d run his hands through his hair and stare at the bills spread across our kitchen table.

“The therapy sessions cost $300 each,” he said, his voice heavy with worry.

“Insurance only covers a fraction.

She needs them twice a week, maybe more.”

I watched him struggle with the math and the way his shoulders sagged when he talked about Lily’s progress. He never directly asked me for money, but the weight of his stress filled our home like smoke.

“Don’t worry about the cost,” I finally said one evening, reaching across the table to squeeze his hand. “We’ll figure it out together.

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