Our Granddaughter Demanded We Sell Our House to Help Her Boyfriend Start a Business – We Gave Her a Reality Check

When Mary and George become grandparents, they want nothing more than to spoil their granddaughter, Ellie. But as Ellie grows into herself, and is almost off to college—the couple have to teach her a lesson in understanding whom to trust with her heart, and their money.

The moment my daughter, Monica, was married, I realized that George and I had finally earned our time off. We were the parents of a married woman, who would eventually give us grandchildren.

A bride and groom | Source: Pexels

A bride and groom | Source: Pexels

And until those grandchildren came into our lives—we were going to take advantage of the healthy years we had left.

A few years later, Monica and Eddie gave birth to our only granddaughter, Ellie.

A newborn baby girl | Source: Pexels

A newborn baby girl | Source: Pexels

Time flew with George and I doting on her. She was our chance at redemption—for us to parent correctly.

“This little girl is everything,” George said when we came home from the hospital on the day Ellie was born.

“We’re going to give her all that we can, Mary, okay?” he said as we got into bed.

An unmade bed | Source: Pexels

An unmade bed | Source: Pexels

I agreed. This was our opportunity to do everything correctly—and we had money now, so spoiling our granddaughter was something that we could do.

Fast forward to eighteen years later.

Now, Ellie is in high school, almost on her way to college. She grew up in front of us with all the attitude that Monica had as a child—and George and I relished every moment of it.

A teenager sitting on the floor | Source: Pexels

A teenager sitting on the floor | Source: Pexels

But then, Ellie’s attitude changed. Her feisty personality was no longer cute but rather something that threatened to change everything about her.

That Sunday morning began like any other, with the breeze taking over the kitchen as I did the weekly pancake and bacon breakfast. It was a routine that George and I had established so many years ago, that it was almost second nature now.

Pancakes with bacon and eggs | Source: Pexels

Pancakes with bacon and eggs | Source: Pexels

George made us cups of tea—the way he always did—when the doorbell rang, slicing through the calm morning.

I switched off the stove and went to answer.

Tea being poured | Source: Unsplash

Tea being poured | Source: Unsplash

There she was, our granddaughter, standing at the threshold, her eyes completely avoiding mine.

“Hi, darling,” I said, stepping aside to let her in. “You’re just in time for breakfast!”

Ellie frowned slightly and nodded to George when he came to see who was at the door.

A red door with a metal doorknob | Source: Unsplash

A red door with a metal doorknob | Source: Unsplash

“Come on, the bacon is extra crispy,” George told her, reaching out to hug her.

But Ellie shook her head.

“Look, I’ll get straight to the point,” she said, her voice trembling slightly, betraying the cold front that she was putting up.

A smiling teenage girl | Source: Unsplash

A smiling teenage girl | Source: Unsplash

Everything was odd about her behavior. Usually, she would barge in with hugs and kisses, and would ask us about our health. She would bring us cookies—always made with less sugar. She would make her love known.

But today, Ellie was a shadow of the child that had grown up in front of us.

A tin of cookies | Source: Unsplash

A tin of cookies | Source: Unsplash

“You remember Tom?” she asked, casually.

Tom was her boyfriend. He was already in college and living off student loans. George and I had met him a few times and he had seemed decent enough. But there was always something about him that seemed off to me.

A smiling young man | Source: Unsplash

A smiling young man | Source: Unsplash

“I don’t know what she sees in him, Mon,” I told my daughter one afternoon when we went to a coffee shop to catch up.

“I don’t know either, Mom,” Monica said, digging into a slice of cake. “Eddie isn’t happy about her dating someone older, but you know Ellie. She made her case about it, saying that Tom was good for her. And that he was helping her understand the transition between high school and college.”

A table in a coffee shop | Source: Unsplash

A table in a coffee shop | Source: Unsplash

Now, Ellie leaned against the wall and continued to speak.

“Tom’s got this startup idea, right? And it is all about renewable energy or something along those lines. He has been speaking to lots of people—advisors and so on. It could be big. Like huge. But there’s a catch. He needs cash to really get it going.”

People sitting around with plans | Source: Unsplash

People sitting around with plans | Source: Unsplash

I watched as my granddaughter took her phone out of her pocket. She continued to avoid eye contact with us.

George and I exchanged a glance. I had a feeling of what was going to come next.

A person holding a phone | Source: Unsplash

A person holding a phone | Source: Unsplash

But still, Ellie’s words felt like a punch to the gut, delivered with a coldness that I couldn’t believe. It wasn’t something that I had ever associated with her.

“I need you guys to sell the house and move in with Mom and Dad. You’ll get a lot of money from this house, especially because of the neighborhood. It’s a good thing. And you’re old anyway, don’t you want to be back with Mom?”

A person holding house keys | Source: Pexels

A person holding house keys | Source: Pexels

“And then what?” I asked.

“And then you can give the money to Tom for his project!” she exclaimed, throwing her hands in the air.

George’s cup clattered against the saucer, his brow furrowed deeply in pain and disbelief at the disrespect coming from Ellie.

A disappointed old man | Source: Unsplash

A disappointed old man | Source: Unsplash

“Ellie,” he said. “This is our home. Not some investment to cash out. It is filled with every memory of us, of our family. Why would you ask us to just give it up for a business venture that sounds like a scheme?”

I remained silent. I didn’t want to step in yet. I sat down on the couch, waiting for George to make Ellie see reason.

Ever since she was a little girl, he was the one person to get her to calm down and get back to herself.

An old woman sitting on a chair | Source: Pexels

An old woman sitting on a chair | Source: Pexels

“Because you’re my grandparents!” Ellie’s voice cracked, her usual composure slipping. “You should want to help me. Tom’s idea will work. You’ll see. We just need this startup capital.”

The room filled with a tense silence, the kind that suffocates.

I could see the desperation in her eyes, a wild, unsettling determination. It was clear that she was lost in her love for Tom, seeing only what she wanted to see.

A close-up of a teenage girl | Source: Unsplash

A close-up of a teenage girl | Source: Unsplash

But I knew in my gut that Tom wasn’t the right person for her. Despite the age difference, there was just something wrong about them.

George and I exchanged a look of shared heartache. We both knew that confronting her directly wouldn’t help—it would only drive her away and try to find the money in a different way.

“We’ll see what we can do,” George told her.

A smiling old man | Source: Unsplash

A smiling old man | Source: Unsplash

After she left, we sat down, the weight of her visit pressing down on us. I began to wash the dishes, letting George come up with a plan.

“We need to show her, not tell her, about this man’s true character,” he said, his voice resolute.

George went into an elaborate scam about creating a fake lottery ticket.

“Don’t worry, Mary, Johnny is a wizard on his computer, he can create it for us.”

A person washing dishes | Source: Unsplash

A person washing dishes | Source: Unsplash

Johnny was our neighbor’s son, and he was always creating posters for missing pets around the neighborhood.

George’s idea was a harmless trick meant to unveil Tom’s intentions without causing permanent scars. We spoke to Johnny, ordering a ticket designed for a jackpot winner and sent it to Tom anonymously—suggesting that it was a lucky draw from a local store.

Man using a laptop | Source: Pexels

Man using a laptop | Source: Pexels

The result was more immediate and devastating than we’d anticipated.

Two days later, as I was vacuuming the living room, Ellie returned, her face pale and streaked with tears.

“What happened?” I asked, enveloping her into my arms.

“Tom’s gone,” she said. “Grandpa told me what he did. And as soon as Tom thought that he had won, he packed his bags. He left to start his real life in the Caribbean—without me.”

A crying teenage girl | Source: Pexels

A crying teenage girl | Source: Pexels

Her voice broke, and my heart with it.

I knew that Tom was going to end in heartbreak, but I didn’t think that it was going to happen so soon.

“I thought he loved me,” she whimpered. “How could I have been so blind?”

I stroked her hair, feeling her shudder with each sob.

A woman comforting a girl | Source: Pexels

A woman comforting a girl | Source: Pexels

“Oh, sweetheart, we didn’t want to hurt you like this,” I murmured, my own eyes damp with sorrow. “We just needed to see if he was the real deal before all of our lives changed to help him.”

As the weeks turned into months, Ellie’s wounds began to heal. She spent more time with us, bringing her art material and setting herself up in the living room.

Eventually, Tom was just another part of her growing up experience.

A person holding their art | Source: Pexels

A person holding their art | Source: Pexels

What would you have done?

If you enjoyed this story, here’s another one for you |

When Eliza’s 10th wedding anniversary comes around, she hopes that Tom will take her away for a romantic getaway. But when he forgets about their anniversary and needs to work, she turns it into a girls’ weekend, only for her to see that Tom’s business trip is a rendezvous with his mistress.

Read the full story here.

This work is inspired by real events and people, but it has been fictionalized for creative purposes. Names, characters, and details have been changed to protect privacy and enhance the narrative. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental and not intended by the author.

The author and publisher make no claims to the accuracy of events or the portrayal of characters and are not liable for any misinterpretation. This story is provided “as is,” and any opinions expressed are those of the characters and do not reflect the views of the author or publisher.

Lucie Arnaz is proud of her ‘15,695 days’ marriage and ‘5 kids’ – she survived famous parents’ horrible divorce

Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz are perhaps one of the most famous couples in television history. Their romance continued off-screen as well. Their marriage was famously tumultuous, and no one knows that better than their daughter Lucie Arnaz.

Keep reading to know more about their daughter and how her life turned out over the years.

Getty Images

Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz were perhaps the most beloved couple on American television at one time. Their show I Love Lucy depicted them as the Ricardos, a middle-class couple that were the ideal nuclear family.

The show had six seasons and ran from 1951 to 1957. It followed Lucille as Lucy Ricardo, a housewife who always gets into hilarious situations. While the couple seemed perfect in their on-screen depiction, in real life, their relationship was quite volatile.

The former Broadway star and the Cuban bandleader met while filming Too Many Girls. Their whirlwind six-month romance led to an elopement and marriage in November 1940.

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After over a decade of their marriage, the couple became parents to daughter Lucie Arnaz, born on July 17, 1951. Two years after that, on January 19, 1953, they became parents to their second child, their son Desi Arnaz Jr.

The two children joined their parents in the family business of acting. They starred alongside their mother in the spin-off shows for I Love Lucy. Then in May 1961, after nearly two decades together, the couple filed for divorce.

It took years for Lucie Arnaz to open up about the reality of her parents’ marriage and their subsequent divorce. She revealed in a 2018 interview how “They were fighting all the time when we were growing up. There was a lot of anger and screaming.”

She lamented at her childhood where she had to deal with so many issues, she said, “Their divorce was horrible. And then there was the alcoholism. I had preferred those things had never been there. We didn’t have any abuse, but we did go through some pretty hard stuff, and that’s why my parents didn’t stay together. “

Lucille felt the split even more than perhaps her husband because she felt she had shattered the perception the American public had of her. She remarried soon after to comedian Gary Morton.

In her early twenties in 1971, Lucie Arnaz tied the knot to “The Doctors” actor Philip Vandervort Menegaux. The marriage ended in divorce five years later

Shutterstock

But the younger Arnaz’s second try at marriage was much more lasting. She met and married actor and writer Laurence Luckinbill. Now the couple has been together for over four decades.

On June 22, 2023, Lucie celebrated her 43rd wedding anniversary with Luckinbill. She took to Instagram to remember the day many decades ago that she was last single on an apple farm in the coastal city of Kingston, New York.

Their friends and family arrived at the venue in a “big yellow school bus.” She was wearing a “lovely cream crocheted gown” as her father walked her down the aisle. She continued in her post, “…[I] vowed to love Laurence Luckinbill till death us do part. 15,695 days, 5 kids, and three grandchildren later, I am proud to still say,’‘ I do.’”

The Murder, She Wrote actress is still very much in love with her husband. She dedicated a sweet post to him on his 88th birthday late last year in November 2022. She posted a picture of him and wrote how he was “kind, talented, adorable, wise, [and] sexy.”

Luckinbill had two children from a previous marriage; Nicholas Luckinbill and Benjamin Luckinbill. And him and Lucie had three more children together; two sons and a daughter.

Their first child together Simon Thomas Luckinbill was born in December 1980, Joseph Henry Luckinbill was born on New Year’s Eve 1982, and their daughter Katharine Desirée Luckinbill was born on January 11, 1985.

Lucie Arnaz and her husband live in Palm Springs, and their family lives nearby. These days the actress wears her hair in a short pixie cut and spends her time with her beloved grandchildren.

On Grandparents Day in 2019, Arnaz joked about hitting the “jackpot” when the couple welcomed their first two grandchildren just four weeks apart from one another. Since then, they have welcomed many more grandchildren to their brood.

Lucie has been a second-generation actor. She was only 11 years old when she starred alongside her mother in The Lucy Show at 11 opposite her mother, which they then followed up with Here’s Lucy.

She also played the main character in the television movie Who Is the Black Dahlia? and also led in the short-lived comedy The Lucie Arnaz Show in 1985 as psychologist Dr. Jane Lucas.

She has played other roles in guest starring parts in shows such as, Marcus Welby, M.D., Murder, She Wrote, Fantasy Island, Law & Order, and the reboot of Will & Grace.

She has also been credited as a producer in three stories related to her parents. Lucy and Desi: A Home Movie, I Love Lucy’s 50th Anniversary Special, and Being the Ricardos. She also produced the 2003 documentary The Desilu Story.

In June 2023 she revealed that she will be doing an encore of her cabaret act titled I Got The Job! Songs From My Musical Past, at 54 Below in New York City. She had performed the show before the pandemic to a sold-out crowd.

While Lucie is very public about her life, her little brother Desi Arnaz Jr. is quite private about his. When Lucille Ball was pregnant with Arnaz Jr, her pregnancy was written into the show. And as fate would have it, she gave birth to him the same day the episode aired in which her character gave birth to ‘Little Ricky.’

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