I refused to pay for my daughter’s wedding when she demanded a private ceremony and insisted I sign over our family lake house. I believed her fiancé had a shady past and thought she was being manipulated. When I said no, she cut me out of her life and married him without me.
Months later, I got a call—she was critically ill. At the hospital, her husband revealed the truth I had buried for years: my daughter had a rare genetic disease, the same one that had killed her older sister. I had lied about it her whole life.
The lake house wasn’t greed—it was their last hope. Her husband was a disgraced genetic researcher, and the house was needed to secretly continue experimental treatment that might have saved her.
I had refused out of fear and denial. Two days later, my daughter died. Her last words were, “I just wanted to live.”
I didn’t just refuse to pay for her wedding—I refused to believe her when she was fighting for her life, and it cost me everything.
