I found out on a Tuesday morning in the campus library. I refreshed my tuition portal and watched the status flip from “paid” to “past due.”
I assumed it was a glitch—until my bank app loaded and the account labeled COLLEGE—EMILY read $0.00.
I drove home and asked my parents what happened. My mom, Linda, didn’t pretend to be surprised. “We reallocated it,” she said. My dad, Mark, kept his eyes on the TV like silence could erase the conversation.
“Reallocated to what?” I asked, though I already knew. For months, our house had been consumed by my brother Jason’s wedding: the waterfront venue, the live band, the guest list packed with people my parents wanted to impress.
Linda’s voice turned crisp. “To Jason’s wedding. It’s important for our family image.”
“That money was for my tuition,” I said. “Grandma and Grandpa saved it.”
My mom leaned forward, not even trying to soften the blow. “Because he’s the one who really matters in this family.”
I didn’t scream. I didn’t cry. I just looked at my dad—one last chance for him to say it was wrong—and he stared at the screen. In that moment, I understood the rules: Jason was the headline; I was the fine print.
I walked out, sat in my car, and called the only person who had never treated me like an afterthought—my grandmother, Ruth.
“Grandma,” I said, voice shaking, “they took it. All of it. One hundred fifty-six thousand.”
Ruth went quiet for a beat. Then she said, steady as stone, “Tell me everything.”
I told her the transfer date, the account name, and my mother’s exact words. Ruth didn’t gasp or curse.
She asked for Jason’s wedding schedule and venue address. When I finished, she said, “I’m going to handle this. You don’t need to argue with them.”
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