I closed my mouth, forcing a thin smile. “All right. Show me the paperwork.”
The realtor slipped me a card with Tom’s number scrawled on the back.
My fingers trembled so hard I almost dropped my phone when I called.
He picked up right away. His voice was rushed, sharp. “Meet me at the hotel.
Room 203.” Then he hung up.
***
30 minutes later…
The walk through the hotel lobby felt endless.
My shoes dragged across the carpet like they weighed fifty pounds.
The hallway smelled of stale air freshener and old smoke.
When I pushed open the door, there he was. Tom, sitting at a little round table as if life were easy. A cup of coffee was in front of him.
A smile spread across his face the moment he saw me.
I dropped into the chair across from him, my body heavy.
“What is this about the house, Tom?”
He leaned back, spreading his arms wide like he was presenting a gift.
“It’s a great deal, Meg.
The market’s hot right now. We can sell the place for triple what we paid. Then we’ll buy a bigger house.
Remember those dreams we had? This is our chance.”
Tom’s words hit me sideways. Dreams?
Tom never spoke of dreams.
My husband never planned anything beyond the weekend, never seemed to care if I waited up at night while he drifted somewhere else. And finally, he was glowing, animated, talking about the future like it was a shiny balloon he could hold.
“All we need,” Tom said, sliding a neat stack of papers across the table, “is your signature.
Then it’s official.”
I glanced down. My name was already printed there, waiting. Tom’s eyes watched me too closely, too eagerly.
I kept my face still, my voice calm.
“Sounds good,” I said slowly.
“But I need time. You know me, Tom. I don’t sign anything without reading every word.”
He leaned closer, his grin wide.
“Take a day or two. But don’t worry — this will change our lives.”
The way he said it made my skin crawl, like there was something hidden behind his smile.
I wrapped my hands around the coffee cup to hide the shaking.
And in that moment, I knew.
Whatever that was, it wasn’t about me. It never was.
At home that night, I spread the papers out across the dining table.
The lamp above hummed softly, throwing a pale glow on the pages.
I read line after line until the words blurred. My eyes stung, but I kept going. Something felt wrong.
Then I saw it.
The buyer’s name. It was Crystal!
The same woman I had seen laughing with Tom at the café, the same woman standing in my living room pretending to be interested in the house. My chest tightened.
She wasn’t just buying. She was buying with him.
***
The phone rang the next morning. Tom was calling from work.
“Have you signed yet?”
I forced a sweetness into my voice.
“Not yet. I’ve been busy. Maybe tomorrow.”
And the next day, when he asked again, I gave him another excuse.
Then another.
Tom grew impatient, his words sharp around the edges, but he hid it with that practiced smile of his. He thought I was slow, cautious, the way I always had been.
He didn’t know I was stalling.
Instead of signing, I drove to see Mr. Davis, my lawyer.
His office smelled of old books and lemon polish.
He was older, kind, and his hands were steady as he lifted the papers and read through them carefully. His brow furrowed.
“Megan,” he said at last, “these aren’t standard. If you sign them as they are, you’ll lose everything.
The house won’t be yours anymore. No protection at all.”
I sat back, my heart pounding.
“So what if,” I asked quietly, “we make another set?
They look the same but hold no legal power. He’ll believe he’s won, but in truth, he’ll have nothing.”
He raised an eyebrow. Then, after a pause, he nodded.
“It can be done. Just keep quiet until the time is right.”
So we did.
When Tom came again, I met him with a wide smile.
I handed over the fake signed copies, my voice light as a feather. “There.
All done.”
The moment the papers touched his hands, his whole face changed. The mask slipped.
The fake kindness melted into raw triumph. He laughed under his breath, low and ugly.
“Good,” he said.
“I’ll take it from here.”
He leaned down and brushed my cheek with a kiss that felt like it came from a stranger, then left in a hurry.
I sat alone in the quiet house, the clock ticking on the wall.
A whisper slipped out of me, steady and sure: “Go on, Tom. Dig your own grave.”
Two days later, Tom swaggered into the house like he owned the air in it.
Crystal followed, dressed in a short red dress that clung to her, her heels clicking across my wooden floors with every step.
She spotted me standing in the doorway, her lips curling into a smirk.
“Get out of our new house, old woman,” she said, flicking her hand at me as though I were dust to be brushed away.
I didn’t move. My feet were planted deep, like roots in the ground.
Tom’s face tightened.
“Megan, don’t make this ugly,” he barked. “I’ll send you the divorce papers later, then Crystal and I are going to live in this house from now on.”
“That’s how it is?” My voice was quiet, but it cut the room in half. “You knew I would keep the house in case of a divorce.”
Crystal rolled her eyes, tossing her hair over her shoulder.
“Now you won’t, because the house is not yours anymore!” she muttered.
I folded my arms across my chest. “Clever. Those were the papers you wanted me to sign, right?”
Tom chuckled, rubbing his hands together like a boy showing off stolen candy.
Crystal leaned into him, smiling that cold smile of hers.
“You should have watched what you signed, old lady!”
My stomach burned, anger rising hot and steady, but I forced my face calm.
They laughed, too sure of themselves to see the shadow in the kitchen doorway.
Officer James, the policeman I’d invited earlier for tea, stood silently, his arms crossed, listening to every single word.
He stepped into the room. His presence cut the air like a blade. “That’s enough!”
Tom’s head whipped around.
His mouth fell open.
“What… What are you doing here?”
“I heard enough to charge you both with fraud,” James said, pulling handcuffs from his belt.
Crystal shrieked. “This is a mistake!”
I stepped forward, my voice calm.
“No mistake. The papers I gave you weren’t real, Tom. I’m keeping the house.
And now the law knows the rest.”
Tom’s face turned red, his hands trembling as James bound them.
“Megan, please…”
“No,” I said, cutting him off. “You played me for a fool.
But I watched, and I waited. And now it’s over.”
Crystal kicked her heels against the floor as James led them out.
The baby-faced woman who once thought she could take my life away now looked like a cornered animal.
When the door shut, silence filled the house again.
My house.
I touched the wall, the old wood steady under my palm. For the first time in years, I felt it was truly mine. That night, I brewed tea for myself and sat by the window.
The future was wide open. My house stood tall, and so did I. And as the moonlight spilled across the floor, I whispered to the empty room,
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