My teenage son suddenly started giving me expensive gifts—things I knew he couldn’t possibly afford.
Soon after, I learned he had been skipping school. When I searched his room and discovered a duffel bag filled with cash, I followed him the next morning. What I discovered nearly made me collapse.
My sixteen-year-old son Joshua and I lived in a small apartment. I worked long hours and stretched every dollar just to keep us afloat. Life wasn’t luxurious, but I tried to make sure he never felt like he was missing anything important.
Then the gifts started appearing.
One evening after work, I walked into the kitchen and saw a box sitting on the table. When I opened it, inside was a pair of expensive leather shoes.
“How did you afford these?” I asked.
Joshua shrugged and said it was from an online sale. I didn’t believe it, but I let it go.
A week later, he gave me a wool coat. Then gold earrings with tiny diamonds. Every time I asked where the money came from, he brushed it off and told me not to worry.
Something felt wrong.
Then his teacher called.
Joshua had missed four days of school.
That was when I knew something serious was happening.
I searched his room and found a duffel bag stuffed with bundles of cash. My heart pounded. I couldn’t imagine how a sixteen-year-old could legally have that much money.
Instead of confronting him right away, I decided to follow him the next morning.
He walked past his high school and continued three blocks down the street to a grocery store parking lot. There, a sleek black car was waiting.
When the driver stepped out, my stomach dropped.
It was Mark—Joshua’s father.
He had abandoned us when Joshua was still a baby and had never paid a cent of child support.
From my hiding spot I watched Mark hand Joshua a thick envelope full of money. I overheard him telling Joshua that I could never give him the life he deserved.
That was when I stepped out.
Joshua looked shocked to see me. Mark acted casual, saying he was “helping his son.”
But then Joshua surprised both of us.
He turned to his father and said he wasn’t meeting him because he wanted a relationship. He was charging him for all the years he had abandoned us. He planned to take the money Mark offered and then cut him out of his life completely.
My heart broke hearing that.
Joshua had been trying to repay me for all the years I struggled.
But I told him that wasn’t how we solved problems. We don’t take money wrapped in manipulation or lies. Instead, we would handle things the right way.
I told Mark that if he had money to hand out in parking lots, he could pay sixteen years of child support through the courts.
He drove away angry.
Back at home, Joshua handed over the cash, the new phone, and the computer he had bought. He admitted he had made a mistake and promised to make up the school he missed.
He was grounded, and we planned to meet with his school counselor.
But this time, things would be different.
I was finally going to take Mark to court.
And after everything, I realized something important: my son hadn’t been drifting away from me.
He had been trying—clumsily and recklessly—to fight for me.
