I bought my father a truck six weeks before his sixtieth birthday, already knowing it wouldn’t unfold the way I hoped. Not because he wouldn’t like it—he would. He loved trucks with a kind of loud certainty, the same way he expressed most of his preferences. Over the years, he had casually mentioned models, engines, features, always framing them as passing thoughts, but in our family, nothing was ever truly casual. Every comment carried an expectation. And this time, I chose to meet it fully.
Still, I understood the risk. In my family, gifts were never just gifts. They were tests. Too little meant indifference, too much meant showing off, and getting it exactly right somehow became suspicious. There was no safe middle ground. You learned to give carefully, almost strategically, anticipating reactions instead of expressing feeling. Even knowing that, I went through with it, hoping—maybe irrationally—that this time would be different.
The truck was perfect. Exactly what he had described over the years, down to the smallest detail. I arranged everything through a broker, keeping the title pending until the dinner. When he opened the key box, something real flickered across his face. For a moment, it felt like I had finally gotten it right. Outside, under the lights, the truck drew admiration from everyone. Even he seemed impressed.
But moments like that don’t last in families like mine. Back at the table, halfway through dessert, he stood, raised his glass, and smiled. “To my idiot daughter,” he said. Laughter filled the room. “Trying to buy love with money.”
I stood, folded my napkin, and left without a word. The next morning, the truck was gone.