A young woman’s parents disapprove of her relationship with a kind man they perceive as poor, so his wealthy father poses as a pauper to teach them a valuable lesson. When Sam Sutton created an unbreakable engine sealant that became wildly successful, he had no idea how it would one day impact his son’s love life. His invention brought quick prosperity, and soon, Sam, his wife Rain, and their infant son Will moved to a lovely home with all the amenities they’d dreamed of.
Years went by, and the family lived comfortably, as the wealth continued to grow beyond Sam’s expectations. Yet, despite their success, they learned that money can’t buy everything when Rain became seriously ill. Sam sought the best doctors, insisting money was no obstacle, but nothing could be done. Losing Rain taught him that some things, like love and health, are priceless.
Raising Will alone, Sam indulged his son as he grew up, but this attention came with a downside: in high school, Will’s peers flocked to him not for who he was, but for the wealth that surrounded him. When a girl he loved was more interested in the Sutton family’s luxurious lifestyle than in Will himself, he realized the shallow attraction to his wealth. He confided in his father, who encouraged him to end the relationship. Though disheartened, Will entered college with a new idea: he would live as though he were a scholarship student with little money, to test who valued him for who he truly was.
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Sam supported his son’s plan, and soon, Will was attending Yale, dressed in thrift-store finds and living on a modest budget. The tactic worked, and he quickly found genuine friends, including a girl named Eddy, who won his heart for her kindness and shared values. By his third year, Will was in love with Eddy and proposed. She eagerly accepted, but when she introduced him to her well-off parents, Marta and Farlow, they saw only his “poor” status. They were cold and dismissive, seeing him as beneath their daughter.
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