For several weeks, money had been quietly disappearing from my wallet. I was convinced that one of my teenagers must be taking it, so I installed a hidden camera in the hallway to catch whoever was responsible. But when I finally reviewed the footage, it wasn’t my kids I saw.
It was my husband. And what happened after that made the missing cash feel like the smallest part of the problem. My name is Charlotte, and not long ago I truly believed my children were stealing from me.
At first, the amounts were small. A five-dollar bill I clearly remembered placing in my wallet suddenly wasn’t there anymore. A few days later, forty dollars disappeared.
Then one hundred. I kept telling myself I must have miscounted or simply forgotten where I’d spent it. But I’ve never been careless with money, not once.
I thought my kids were stealing from me. By the third week, I had started checking my wallet every night before going to sleep and again first thing in the morning, mentally replaying every errand I had run during the day as if I were trying to prove myself wrong. But the numbers never changed.
Then one Tuesday morning, three hundred dollars had vanished overnight. That evening at dinner, I studied my kids’ faces the way someone studies a cracked mirror. My son focused intently on his plate.
My daughter shrugged a little too quickly when I mentioned it. My youngest looked at me with complete confusion, as if I’d suddenly started speaking a different language. Three hundred dollars had vanished overnight.
“Kids,” I said slowly, setting my fork down and choosing my words carefully, “if you ever need money, you come and ask your father or me. You don’t take it without permission. Stealing from your family isn’t acceptable.
Not in this house.”
They exchanged glances and then looked back at me with expressions that seemed completely blank. But blank expressions don’t always mean innocence. And I wasn’t ready to dismiss the idea yet.
“Mom, we didn’t take anything,” my daughter said, brushing her hair back behind her ear. “I never touched your wallet,” my son added defensively, finally meeting my eyes. “Stealing from your family isn’t acceptable.”
My husband, Peter, placed his fork down beside his plate.
“They know you won’t really punish them,” he said, leaning back in his chair. “That’s the problem. They’re pushing limits because they know you’ll let them.”
I looked at him across the table.
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