When my in-laws offered my 13-year-old son $80,000 for his college fund, I was stunned. They’d never shown that kind of generosity before. But when I came home early and overheard them threatening him about “what he saw,” I realized their money wasn’t a gift. It was a bribe to bury something darker.
My in-laws, Steven and Doris, had never been the gift-giving type. Birthday cards came with $20 bills, if we were lucky. Christmas presents were practical: socks, dish towels, things they’d probably gotten on sale.
When my husband, Shawn, and I bought our first house, they sent a potted plant with a card that said “Congratulations!” and nothing else.
We were sitting at my in-laws’ dining table on a random Wednesday night when they dropped the bomb.Doris set down her wineglass with that careful precision she always had and said, “We’ve been thinking… we’d like to contribute to Johnny’s college fund.”
I smiled politely, expecting maybe a few thousand dollars at most. They were successful. They owned a chain of boutique hotels across three states. But they’d never been what you’d call “generous” with us.Then Steven named the amount.
I laughed because I thought I’d misheard him. “I’m sorry, what?”
“Eighty thousand,” he repeated calmly. “We want Johnny to have options. Good schools. No debt.”
Shawn squeezed my hand under the table, his face lit up with relief and gratitude. But Johnny just stared at his plate, perfectly still.