Being a single mom wasn’t the hard part. The real pain was watching my daughter realize, again and again, that her father would always choose someone else over her. But when he tried to take back the birthday gift he’d given her just to satisfy his new wife, something inside me snapped. I knew it was time to teach him a lesson—one he’d never forget.
Twelve years of marriage had left wounds that never fully healed. Willie walked away from us and built a new life while I worked two jobs, held our home together, and made sure Lily never felt abandoned. I told myself I was strong, that she’d never see how much his absence hurt. But the day he called demanding Lily’s tablet back—because his wife “didn’t approve”—I saw tears in my daughter’s eyes, and all the old pain came roaring back.
I agreed to meet him and told Lily to bring the tablet. But I also brought something else: a folder filled with every receipt, every bill, every bit of Lily’s own savings she had put toward apps and accessories. When Willie reached for the tablet at the café, I slid the stack of documents across the table. “You can take it,” I said calmly, “right after you reimburse your daughter for everything she invested.”
The look on his face said everything. Sarah huffed. Willie hesitated. And after a long, tense silence, he muttered, “Fine. Keep it,” and stormed out. Lily turned to me, eyes shining. “I get to keep it?” she whispered. I smiled. “It was always yours.”
That night, she curled beside me and softly said, “Thanks for standing up for me, Mom.” I held her close. Because that’s what real parents do: they don’t just protect—they empower. And sometimes love means drawing a line no one is allowed to cross.