I came back from taking care of my dad and found my mother-in-law living in my apartment: “This house is now my son’s and mine,” she told me, without imagining that in a hidden drawer I would discover the lie that could destr0y my marriage — Part 3
“So you decided losing me was acceptable.”
“My mother had nowhere else to go,” he argued. “I promised her I’d find a place.”
“And you chose my home?”
“I knew you’d say no.”
“Because the answer was no.”
“That’s why I had to do it this way,” he shouted. “You’re selfish with your success.”
That was when I understood.
Thomas wasn’t sorry.
He was only angry he had been caught.
That night, he arrived with his mother. I watched them through the security monitor. He wore a crisp white shirt and the face of an innocent man. Mrs. Higgins cried loudly for the cameras.
“Alice, open the door so we can talk like adults,” Thomas ordered through the intercom.
I didn’t open it.
Instead, I put my attorney on speaker.
“Mr. Thomas Rivas,” Sarah said, “this conversation is being recorded. You are not authorized to enter this property. The forged documents have been sent to the bank and building administration and will be provided to police in the morning.”
Mrs. Higgins screamed, “You’re destroying my son’s future over a stupid apartment!”
I looked through the peephole.
“No,” I said. “Your son destroyed his own future when he tried to steal from his wife.”
Thomas began hitting the door with his palm.
“Alice, please. Don’t ruin my life.”
“Did you ever care what you were doing to mine?”
He had no answer.
Security escorted them out.
The next few days were awful but necessary. The notary confirmed Thomas had tried to validate manipulated digital copies. The bank froze his loan. My lawyer filed a formal complaint.
Recovered messages showed Mrs. Higgins had written:
“Do it before she comes home. Once I’m inside, she won’t get me out easily.”
Thomas had replied:
“We just need her to hold out until the loan is approved, then we’ll have control.”
It wasn’t panic.
It was a plan.
I filed for divorce immediately. I changed every password, bank account, insurance policy, and lock. When news of the fraud investigation spread, Thomas lost major clients. His agency closed three months later.
Mrs. Higgins moved in with a distant niece and told everyone I had ruined her son.
But I had taken nothing from them.
I had only stopped letting them use my life as a ladder.
It took time for my apartment to feel like mine again. I painted the living room sage green, bought new plants, returned my books to their shelves, and threw away anything that smelled like stale incense.
I placed the blue mug on a high shelf in the pantry.
I don’t use it anymore.
But seeing it reminds me that some things are worth protecting.
One Sunday morning, I made coffee in a new mug while sunlight streamed through the window.
For the first time in months, I felt no fear.
Then a message came from an unknown number.
“I hope you’re happy. Thomas isn’t the same anymore.”
I didn’t reply.
I blocked the number and set the phone down.
They were right.
Thomas wasn’t the same.
Now everyone knew who he really was.
And I wasn’t the same either.
I was no longer the wife who ignored her instincts to avoid conflict.
I was the woman who finally understood that protecting what she built wasn’t selfish.
It was self-respect.