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My Late Mom Left Me a Trust Fund, but My Dad Took Money from It for His Stepdaughter — I Finally Retaliated

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My mom was my everything, and when cancer took her, she left me memories and a lifeline — a trust fund meant for my future.

When my dad greedily started using it for his stepdaughter, it felt like he was erasing Mom’s memory piece by piece.

I couldn’t let him take what was left of her or me.

There’s this thing about losing someone you love — you carry the weight of it forever, even if it doesn’t show. I lost my mom to breast cancer when I was ten. One day, she was there, brushing my hair and humming to some old rock song, and the next, she was gone.

Just like that.

I remember our last conversation like it was yesterday. She was sitting on her hospital bed, her fingers weakly running through my hair.

“Promise me something, baby girl,” she whispered.

“Anything, Mom,” I said, trying to hold back my tears.

“Promise me you’ll never let anyone dim your light. You’re so special, Iris.

So incredibly special.”

She didn’t leave me with much — just a few photos, the smell of her favorite vanilla perfume lingering on her scarves, and a trust fund she set up for me before she passed.

“This is for Iris,” she’d told my dad and my grandparents. “For her education and her future. Promise me she’ll always have it.”

They promised.

My dad promised too. But promises don’t mean much when someone’s not around to hold you to them.

My dad remarried two years later. His new wife, Marianne, came with her own baggage: a twelve-year-old daughter named Emily.

I didn’t mind at first.

Mom was gone, and I thought maybe this could be a new chapter.

But I quickly learned how things would work in our house: Emily first, Marianne second, Dad somewhere in the mix, and me? Not even in the picture!

It started small. Once, our fridge and shower broke at the same time.

Dad took money from the trust fund without my permission to fix them.

“I’ll pay it back,” he said like it was no big deal. A week later, he bought Emily a MacBook for her birthday. On mine?

A $100 gift card.

It wasn’t the money — it was the message.

Over the years, he kept dipping into the fund for car repairs, home renovations, and things that had nothing to do with me. “It’s just temporary,” he’d always say. But the withdrawals kept piling up, and the “temporary” excuses wore thin.

By the time I got to college, I didn’t need the money for tuition because of my scholarship.

That didn’t stop him from finding new ways to use it, though. Every time I brought it up, he brushed me off. “Don’t stress, Iris.

It’s safe.”

Safe. Right.

“You understand, don’t you, Iris?” That’s what he’d always say when something I needed got pushed aside for Emily. New clothes for her pageant?

Sure. My vacation? Maybe next year.

It stung, but I swallowed it down.

But the swallowing got harder.

I’ll never forget the day I realized how much of Mom’s trust fund was gone. It was late one night during my final year of college. I’d overheard Emily talking to her friends about how “Daddy” was covering the cost of her new car.

My stomach twisted as I thought about the fund.

“Can you believe it?” Emily squealed through the thin walls. “A brand new BMW! Daddy said I deserve it for making it to nationals!”

My hands trembled as I sat at my desk, memories of Mom’s words echoing in my head: “This is for Iris.

For her future.”

It had been years since I’d seen the account. My dad had told me not to “stress over it.” But now, something felt off, and I decided to check it.

I logged into the account, and my heart sank. The numbers didn’t make sense.

Thousands were missing. Pageant fees. A water heater.

Emily’s car. Every withdrawal was like a punch in the gut.

By the time I closed my laptop, my hands were shaking. This wasn’t just money.

It was Mom’s legacy. She’d trusted Dad to protect it, and he’d drained it like it was his personal wallet.

I called my grandma the next morning.

“Sweetheart,” she said after I told her everything. “This has gone on long enough.

You have to stand up to him.”

“I can’t breathe, Grandma,” I sobbed into the phone. “It feels like he’s erasing Mom piece by piece. Like he’s erasing ME.”

“Oh, my sweet girl,” she whispered.

“Your mother would be furious right now. She fought so hard to make sure you’d be taken care of.”

“I know,” I cried, my throat tight. “I trusted when he said he’d put the money back.

But he’s only been draining Mom’s hard-earned money.”

“Your mother was a fighter,” Grandma added. “And so are you. It’s time to show them that.”

“I will when the right time comes,” I said, my heart heavy as I hung up.

It all came to a head a week later.

Graduation was around the corner, and I was finally ready to celebrate after four years of sleepless nights and busted printer deadlines. I called Dad and told him I was graduating on December 20th. I could hear the pause on the other end of the line, long enough for my stomach to drop.

“Oh, December 20th?” he said finally.

“That’s when Emily’s pageant is. We’ve already made plans.”

“You’re missing my graduation for a pageant?”

“Ah, c’mon, Iris. Graduation’s not a big deal.

You’ll have more of those. But this pageant? It’s her chance to shine.”

I didn’t even realize I was gripping my phone so hard until my fingers started to hurt.

“You’re kidding, right?”

I heard Marianne chime in, her tone dripping with condescension from the background. “Don’t be selfish, Iris. Graduations happen all the time.

Emily’s pageant is once-in-a-lifetime.”

“Selfish?” I spat. “Dad, this isn’t about being selfish. This is about you choosing Emily over me.

Again.”

“That’s not fair —” he protested.

“Not fair? You want to talk about fair? When was the last time you chose me?

When was the last time you even saw me?”

“Of course I see you, Iris.”

“No, you DON’T!” The words burst out of me like a dam breaking. “You see Emily. You see her pageants and her dance recitals and her EVERYTHING.

But me? I’m just the ghost in the corner. Mom’s leftover that you don’t know what to do with.”

“Iris, that’s enough!”

“No, it’s not enough!

It’s never been enough!” I cried, years of hurt pouring out. “Do you know what Mom’s last words to me were? She made me promise not to let anyone dim my light.

But you’ve been doing exactly that for years, Dad. Years!”

He sighed like I was being unreasonable. “We’ll celebrate when we’re back.

I promise.”

The word “promise” hit me like a slap. “Your promises don’t mean anything anymore,” I whispered. “They haven’t since Mom died.”

I hung up without saying goodbye.

My grandparents, at least, showed up for my graduation. Seeing their proud faces in the crowd made the day feel a little less lonely. They hugged me so tightly afterward, reminding me that someone still cared.

I was happy, but I had one last thing to do.

The next day, I walked into Dad’s office with the account statements in hand. My stomach was doing backflips, but I couldn’t let that stop me.

“We need to talk,” I said, shutting the door behind me and dropping the papers on his desk.

Dad looked up from his computer, frowning. “What’s this?”

“The trust fund statement.

Mom’s trust fund. The one you’ve been draining for years.”

His face paled, but he tried to play it off. “Iris, come on.

Everything I’ve spent was for the family. You’ve never needed it. You had a scholarship.”

“That money wasn’t for the family,” I cut in.

“It was for ME. For MY future. And you spent it on Emily.

Don’t even try to deny it. The statements don’t lie.”

“You don’t understand what it’s like,” he stood up, his voice rising. “Being a father, trying to blend two families —”

“And you don’t understand what it’s like watching your father erase every trace of your mother!” I shot back.

“That money was the last thing she could give me, and you treated it like your personal ATM!”

He leaned back in his chair, his jaw tightening. “I did what I had to do.”

“No,” I said, standing my ground. “You did what was convenient for you.

And now you’re going to pay it back. Every penny.”

His laugh was bitter. “And if I don’t?”

“Then I’ll sue you.”

The room went silent.

For the first time in my life, I saw real fear in his eyes.

“You wouldn’t,” he said finally.

“Mom always said I had her backbone,” I replied. “Maybe it’s time you remembered that.”

The fallout was as messy as I expected. My stepmom and stepsister called me, yelling through the phone.

“How could you do this, Iris?” Marianne’s voice was shrill like I had personally burned their house down.

“Do what?” I said, gripping my phone tighter. “Stand up for myself? Demand the respect I’ve never gotten from you people?”

“Don’t make this about you,” she snapped.

“You’re punishing us because we couldn’t be in two places at once. You know how much Emily’s pageant meant to her!”

“And my graduation didn’t mean anything to you,” I fired back. “I’ve had enough, Marianne.

I’m done.”

“How dare you? After everything we’ve done for you?”

“Done for me?” I laughed hollowly. “What exactly have you done except try to replace everything about Mom?”

“I tried to be a mother to you!”

“No,” I snapped.

The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page. Tap READ MORE to discover the rest 🔎👇

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