I met his eyes.
“Then I want to take back what’s mine.”
Tom nodded slowly.
“Legally, you’re on very solid ground. The house is in your name. You can serve notice at any time. But you understand what this may do to your relationship with Daniel.”
“It’s already done something to my relationship with Daniel,” I said. “I’m just the only one willing to admit it.”
For the next two hours, we built a strategy.
Not out of rage. I couldn’t afford rage.
Out of clean, clear necessity.
As I left his office, my phone buzzed.
For one wild second, I thought, Daniel.
It was Jessica.
Daniel says you’re upset. You need to apologize for storming out. We’re willing to forgive you this time, but please don’t be dramatic again. Family dinner is Sunday at six if you want to make things right.
I stared at the message for a full minute.
Then I forwarded it to Tom with one line beneath it.
Proceed with documentation.
Full speed.
The next morning, I did something I had never done before.
I drove past their house—my house—at seven a.m. and parked three homes down where I could see without being obvious. Daniel left for work at seven fifteen, tie slightly crooked, shoulders rounded with exhaustion.
Good, I thought with a kind of bitter clarity. He should be tired.
Jessica came out at nine thirty in expensive athleisure Daniel’s salary could not possibly support. She got into a white BMW that was still relatively new, backed out of the driveway, and headed toward an upscale shopping center.
I followed at a careful distance.
For three hours, from a coffee shop across the street, I watched her meet two friends for brunch, laugh, hold out her hands to show off a manicure, and pay with a credit card as if money had no edges at all.
This was the woman who claimed they were drowning.
I took photographs. Timestamps. Notes.
Tom had made himself clear: if I wanted to protect myself properly, I needed documentation that they were financially capable of supporting themselves. It would undercut any future claim that I had thrown them into hardship.
Friday afternoon, Tom called.
“I had an investigator pull some records,” he said. “Margaret, you need to come in.”
An hour later, I was sitting in his office again while he slid a folder toward me.
Bank activity. Publicly available financial data. Transaction patterns.
Daniel and Jessica’s joint account showed his regular salary deposits, but that was not what made my blood run cold. It was the recurring withdrawals: three thousand, five thousand, twenty-five hundred. Always a few days before what they believed was the mortgage due date.
“They’re pulling money out,” Tom said quietly, “then transferring only part of what they think is the mortgage payment. The rest is disappearing elsewhere.”
I looked up.
“They’re skimming from themselves?”
“In practical terms, yes. They think they’re sending three thousand one hundred toward the house. In reality, they’re sending much less than that some months. Your autopay is covering the actual mortgage.”
I thought of the cruise brochures, the shopping bags, the BMW.
Tom turned another page.
“And Jessica has a separate personal savings account. Forty-seven thousand dollars.”
“While telling people they’re broke.”
He gave me a grim look.
“Yes.”
I took a breath.
“If I take back the house, can they claim the payments they’ve made?”
“No. There’s no promissory note. No lender agreement. Legally, those payments were gifts, or at most informal occupancy payments. Certainly not ownership.”
Then he tapped the deed.
“There’s something else. We should update the county record immediately. It will create a fresh public timestamp and protect you.”
My phone rang.
Daniel.
I let it go to voicemail.
Tom looked at me.
“You don’t have to answer.”
“I know.”