There wasn’t even a mattress on the bed frame. Just slats and silence.
I stood there too long, blinking like it would reverse itself.
Then I noticed the sticky note on the kitchen counter.
“Choosing happiness,” I whispered, and it tasted like pennies. I let out a laugh that sounded wrong in my own ears.
Then something in me gave way, and I knew what I wanted. Not a need for revenge, exactly, but for control.
“Okay, Sandy,” I said out loud.
“Move.”
I opened my bank app first. Savings: $0.
Checking: barely enough for groceries.
My hands shook so hard I nearly dropped my phone.
I called the bank. A bright voice answered, chipper like my life wasn’t on fire.
“My accounts are empty,” I said.
“All of them.”
Jess typed, and I listened to the clicks. “I’m seeing multiple withdrawals and transfers over the last week.”
“That money was for medical treatment,” I said. “I didn’t authorize any of it.”
“I’m sorry,” Jess said, softer.
“These transactions were made by an authorized user.”
My mouth went dry. “David.”
Jess hesitated, then confirmed it. “Yes, ma’am.
The access matches what’s on file.”
“So lock it down. Freeze everything, remove him, change access, all of it.”
“We can do that now,” she said. “We can also open an investigation, but it won’t be immediate.”
“Do it anyway,” I said.
“I want a record.”
When I hung up, I didn’t cry. I went straight to the credit cards.
I canceled joint cards, changed passwords, reset security questions, and turned on two-factor authentication like I was sealing doors in a hurricane. Each call made me steadier, which scared me and soothed me at the same time.
Then a man named Aaron said, “Are you calling about the loan too?”
I froze.
“What loan?”
“Personal loan opened three weeks ago,” Aaron said. “Co-borrowers are you and David.”
“I didn’t open any loan,” I said. “I didn’t sign anything.”
“It was an electronic signature through your joint online banking profile.
If that wasn’t you, you’ll need to report it.”
I stared at the empty wall until my vision blurred. David didn’t just steal what we had. He set me up to owe what we didn’t.
I started documenting the house like a crime scene.
Photos of the damaged lock, video of each empty room, close-ups of drawer tracks, and scuffs where furniture used to sit.
I opened a notes app and began listing everything missing. It felt obsessive, but obsession is sometimes just survival with a clipboard.
Two hours after I got home, my phone rang. David’s name flashed, and I let it ring until the last second.
I answered and said nothing.
“Sandy?” His voice was high, frantic.
“Sandy, are you there?!”
I waited until he had to sit in his own panic. Then I said, “Hello, David. How’s the weather in Oahu?”
He choked on a breath.
“I WANT YOU TO STOP TAKING REVENGE ON ME RIGHT NOW!”
“Revenge?” I repeated. “Is that what you call me protecting myself?”
“They kicked us out,” he cried. “We have nowhere to live!”
I pictured him in a lobby, suitcase out, trying to charm reality into moving.
I pictured a woman beside him, suddenly less “beautiful” without my money.
“That’s awful,” I said lightly. “What a surprise.”
“Fix it,” David begged. “Call the hotel and tell them it was a mistake!”
“A mistake is forgetting an anniversary.
You stole my savings and emptied our home.”
“It was ours,” he snapped, then softened fast. “I mean, it was ours. We were drowning.”
