Clara continues to fiercely protect her son Robert’s memory five years after his death. Unaffected since his death, the college fund established for him prior to his birth through donations and sacrifices has grown into a revered representation of hope. Clara and her husband Martin have endured years of heartache and failed attempts to conceive another child in silence, while Robert’s dream of becoming an astrophysicist is now only a memory.
The calm at Martin’s birthday dinner is broken when his sister Amber boldly demands that her son Steven receive the remaining college funds. She argues that the money is being wasted and supports her request by citing Clara’s advanced age and infertility. When Jay, their father-in-law, reveals that Amber had previously used Steven’s own money on a Disney vacation years prior, Clara and Martin are stunned into silence.
Jay reveals Amber’s arrogance and her inability to hold her son responsible for his subpar academic achievement. He reminds her that rather than being a convenient backup plan, the fund was a long-term investment that was created out of love and purpose. Amber is humiliated by the altercation, and the rest of the family is left in tense silence. Then, with a voice steady with strength and grief, Clara speaks.
Clara argues that the fund is Robert’s legacy because it carries the weight of all of his memories and moments of hope for the future. To take it now would be to erase him once more. After Amber storms out, she sends Clara a sour message accusing her of being selfish, but Clara doesn’t reply. She is aware that true love cannot be purchased or demanded.
Clara uses Robert’s old telescope while she sits in his room that evening. Martin silently joins her. They mourn and remember in the quiet, understanding that preserving what is left is a form of love in and of itself.
The fund will remain unaltered because it still contains a boy’s dreams, not out of animosity.