From the day our son, Jason, was born, my husband and I believed he was destined for something special. He was the kind of child who made everything look easy — straight A’s, debate team captain, piano recitals, science fairs. When other kids struggled to keep up, Jason seemed to glide through life with quiet confidence and an effortless charm that made teachers adore him and classmates look up to him.
We were proud.
Maybe too proud. When he got accepted into one of the top universities in the state — full of prestige, beautiful ivy-covered buildings, and a name that turned heads — it felt like the reward for every sacrifice we had made.
My husband, Robert, worked double shifts for years, and I picked up every weekend substitute teaching job I could find. We told ourselves it was all worth it — that someday, Jason would graduate, land a great job, and have the kind of life we could only dream of.
When he left for college, I remember standing by the car, waving as he drove away.
I cried the moment he turned the corner. Robert wrapped an arm around me and said, “He’s going to make us proud, Carol.”
And for a long while, I thought he did. At first, everything seemed normal.
Jason called regularly, sometimes every other day, telling us about his professors, his new friends, and the “intense workload.” He complained about staying up late for exams and pulling all-nighters to finish research papers.
We sent him money every month — enough to cover tuition, books, and living expenses. Sometimes, a little extra when he hinted about “unexpected fees.”
“College is expensive these days,” Robert would say with a shrug.
“Better he focus on his studies than worry about part-time jobs.”
I agreed. We wanted him to have the chance to focus fully on his education.
Jason emailed us copies of his “tuition statements” once or twice — PDFs with the university’s logo and his name.
I never thought to question them. Why would I? They looked legitimate, and besides, he was our son.
Our Jason.
The first hint that something was wrong came during his second year. He stopped calling as often.
When I texted him, he’d reply with short answers Busy, Mom. Big project this week.
Or can’t talk, I’m studying for finals.
I missed him terribly, but I didn’t want to nag. College life was demanding; I told myself it was normal for him to drift a little. Then came the holidays.
He didn’t come home for Thanksgiving.
He said he had a group project due. Then he missed Christmas, saying he’d gotten a part-time job on campus and couldn’t afford the trip.
Robert was disappointed but tried to stay upbeat. “He’s growing up,” he said.
“Let him figure things out.”
But something in me felt uneasy.
When I asked Jason to video call, he always had an excuse — bad Wi-Fi, too late, or “I look terrible, Mom.”
I brushed it off at first. But unease began to gnaw at me. By the time Jason was supposed to start his senior year, we had sent him nearly $60,000 in total — money we’d saved over decades.
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