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Last night, I heard my husband giving my PIN to his mother while I was asleep: ‘Take it all out, there’s over a hundred and twenty thousand dollars on it.’ I just smiled and went back to sleep. Forty minutes later, his phone buzzed with a text from his mom: “Son, she knew everything. Something’s happening to me…” Then the phone suddenly went dead.

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“Haven’t seen you in a while. How are you? How’s your husband?”

Kiana smiled politely.

“Hello, Ms. Mabel. Everything’s fine, thank you.”

“Well, I saw Darius leaving with bags yesterday. Did you two have a fight?”

There it is, Kiana thought, holding back a sigh.

The gossip would spread through the building at the speed of light.

“We’re getting divorced,” she said calmly. “We just didn’t work out.”

Ms. Mabel gasped.

“Oh my goodness, and I thought you two were such a strong couple. Young and attractive.”

“It happens,” Kiana shrugged. “It’s nothing terrible. Life goes on.”

She said goodbye and walked on, feeling the neighbor’s curious gaze on her back.

By evening, the entire apartment building would know that the Jenkinses were divorcing.

Let them.

She didn’t care.

That evening, she did go to Shauna’s place.

Her friend greeted her with open arms, sat her down in the cozy kitchen of her small ranch house, and brewed aromatic thyme tea.

“Tell me everything from the beginning,” Shauna demanded, settling down opposite her. “And don’t even think about holding anything back.”

Kiana told the story, detailing every event without rushing.

Shauna listened, mouth agape, and at the end simply shook her head.

“Wow, you’re such a star, Kiki. I would have screamed and called the police immediately. And you calculated everything so calmly and outmaneuvered them.”

“I didn’t outmaneuver them. I just took precautions.”

“You’re a genius,” Shauna laughed.

“Three dollars on the card. That’s classic. I can just imagine how your mother‑in‑law reacted when they cornered her at the bank.”

Kiana smirked.

It was funny to picture.

“All right. You know, I’m not even angry at them,” she confessed. “More like pity. It’s a shame I wasted five years on a person capable of that.”

Shauna reached across the table and covered Kiana’s hand with hers.

“Don’t regret it. Five years isn’t forever. The important thing is that you realized it in time and left. Some people live with folks like that their whole lives and suffer.”

Kiana nodded.

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