I always believed that family should support each other no matter what. That’s why, when my younger sister, Emma, announced her wedding, I decided to do something meaningful for her. She and her fiancé, Jack, had been together for five years, and I knew they were saving for a house. As her older sister, I wanted to give them a strong start, so I promised them $10,000 as a wedding gift.
It wasn’t pocket change for me—I had worked hard to save that money. But I wanted to do something special for her. Emma was my only sibling, and despite our occasional differences, I wanted to believe she deserved my generosity.
I told her and Jack about the gift in advance, and they were both incredibly grateful. Jack even pulled me aside one evening and said, “You have no idea how much this means to us. We’ll be able to put a bigger down payment on a home.” His excitement reassured me that I was doing the right thing.
Then, everything fell apart.
A month before the wedding, Jack discovered that Emma had been cheating on him. And not just with anyone—with one of his old friends. A double betrayal. When Jack confronted her, she didn’t even try to deny it. Instead, she made excuses—how she felt trapped, how she wasn’t sure if marriage was what she wanted, how she had “gotten caught up in emotions.”
Jack, rightfully, called off the wedding.
I was stunned when I heard the news. I never thought Emma would do something like this. Sure, she had always been a little selfish, a little reckless—but this? She had broken a man’s heart, shattered his trust, and ruined what was supposed to be their future together.
What shocked me even more was how she reacted.
Instead of remorse, instead of apologizing or taking accountability, she acted as if she were the victim. “I guess he never really loved me if he’s just willing to throw it all away over one mistake,” she told me. “I mean, it wasn’t even serious. He’s just being dramatic.”
I had to bite my tongue not to explode at her. Jack wasn’t being dramatic. He had been devastated. He had trusted her. And she had thrown it away.
I figured that was the worst of it. But then she did something I never saw coming.
A few days after the wedding was officially canceled, Emma showed up at my house, casually dressed in leggings and an oversized sweater, her nails freshly manicured. She wasn’t crying. She wasn’t heartbroken. If anything, she looked annoyed.
She plopped down on my couch and sighed. “So, listen,” she said, her voice light and unconcerned, “I know the wedding didn’t happen, but I still want my gift.”
I blinked. “What?”
“The $10,000,” she said, as if it was obvious. “You promised it, and, well, I still need it. I have to find a new place to live, and honestly, a shopping spree would really help cheer me up.”
I stared at her, speechless.
She wasn’t joking. She wasn’t ashamed. She wasn’t even grateful that I had ever offered in the first place.
I felt my stomach turn. I had promised that money for her wedding, to help her and Jack build a future together. But now, she wanted to take it and spend it on herself after she was the reason the wedding didn’t happen?
That’s when I realized something.
Emma had never truly appreciated what people did for her. She had always expected things to go her way, always assumed she deserved whatever she wanted. And for the first time in my life, I wasn’t going to let that slide.
So, I decided to teach her a lesson.
I took a deep breath and put on a sympathetic expression. “Oh, sweetie,” I said. “There’s a little problem with that.”
Her brows furrowed. “What do you mean?”
“Well,” I sighed dramatically. “Since I had planned that money for your wedding, and the wedding didn’t happen… I figured I should do something else with it.”
Her eyes narrowed. “Like what?”
I smiled. “I gave it to Jack.”
Her mouth fell open. “You what?”
“Well, he’s the one who got cheated on,” I said with a shrug. “And he was counting on that money for a house, right? I figured, since you didn’t need it anymore, he could use the help.”
I had never seen my sister’s face turn so red. “You had no right to do that! That was my money!”
“No,” I said, my voice calm but firm. “It was never your money. It was a gift for your marriage, and you made sure that marriage didn’t happen. You don’t get rewarded for ruining your own wedding.”
Emma sputtered, completely furious. “You can’t just—”
“I can just,” I interrupted. “And I did.”
She stormed out of my house that day, slamming the door so hard the windows rattled. She sent me angry texts for days, calling me a traitor, a terrible sister, and every name she could think of.
But honestly? I didn’t regret it for a second.
Jack was overwhelmed when I gave him the money. He refused at first, but I insisted. “You were planning a life with my sister,” I told him. “You didn’t deserve what happened. If this can help you move forward, I want you to have it.”
He finally accepted, and months later, he told me he had put the money toward a down payment on a small but beautiful condo. “It’s not the house I imagined,” he admitted, “but it’s mine. And it’s a fresh start.”
As for Emma? She eventually stopped speaking to me for a while, but honestly, I didn’t care. She needed to learn that actions have consequences—and that people aren’t just ATM machines waiting to fund her selfishness.
Maybe, just maybe, this was the wake-up call she needed.
What would you have done in my place? Would you have given her the money or taught her a lesson? Share your thoughts in the comments and don’t forget to like this post if you enjoyed the story!