Cash had been disappearing from my wallet for weeks. I was certain one of my teenagers was taking it, and I was ready to confront them. So I set up a hidden camera to catch the thief.
What I saw on that footage wasn’t my kids. It was my husband.
I’m Charlotte, and a few weeks ago, I thought my kids were stealing from me.
It started small. A $5 bill I was sure I’d tucked into my wallet — gone.
Then $40. Then $100.
I told myself I was miscounting and maybe just careless. But I’ve never been careless with money, not once in my life.
By the third week, I was checking my wallet before bed and again at dawn, retracing every errand like I was trying to catch myself in a lie.
But the numbers never lied.
Then one Tuesday, $300 vanished overnight, all at once.
That evening at dinner, I watched my kids’ faces like a woman looking for cracks.
My son kept his eyes on his plate.
My daughter shrugged a little too fast when I brought it up. My youngest just stared at me like I’d started speaking another language.
“Kids,” I said, choosing my words carefully as I set my fork down, “if you ever need money, you ask Dad or me. You don’t take it.
Stealing from family isn’t okay. Not in this house, not ever.”
They all looked at each other, then back at me, faces genuinely blank.
But blank faces don’t always mean innocence. And I wasn’t ready to let this go just yet.
“Mom, we didn’t take anything,” my daughter argued, pushing her hair behind her ear.
“I haven’t touched your wallet,” my son added, a little defensive, finally lifting his eyes to mine.
My husband, Peter, set his fork down.
“They know you won’t really discipline them,” he said, leaning back in his chair. “That’s the whole problem. They’re testing you because you let them.”
I looked at him across the table.
He said it with such certainty as if he’d already decided who the guilty party was and was just waiting for the rest of us to catch up.
I believed Peter then. Lord help me, I believed every word of it.
The next morning, another $300 was gone. I sat on the edge of the bed, wallet open in my lap, and just blinked.
I was done second-guessing myself.
After work, I stopped at the hardware store.
By nightfall, a hidden camera was fixed to the hallway wall, angled toward the hook where I always left my purse.
My wallet stayed exactly where it always did, bills neatly stacked, practically gift-wrapped for whoever was helping themselves.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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