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.

 

“Now your mother is sitting at the bank explaining to the security service why she was trying to withdraw over a hundred thousand dollars from someone else’s card. They might transfer the case to the police if they want to. It depends on whether I file a report.”

He looked up quickly.

“You won’t file one. Please don’t. That’s my mom. They’ll arrest her.”

Kiana looked at him for a long, scrutinizing moment.

There he sat, pathetic and scared, begging for mercy for his mom—the same person who had tried to clean out his wife an hour earlier.

“I don’t know,” she said finally. “I haven’t decided yet.”

Darius jumped up and stepped toward her.

“Kiki, please understand. This was just a stupid mistake. We didn’t want to hurt you. We just needed the money.”

“Money is always needed,” she interrupted. “But normal people earn it. They don’t steal it from their wives.”

He fell silent, standing with his hands hanging uselessly at his sides, his face etched with complete despair.

Somewhere deep down, Kiana felt a faint pang of pity—but it was just that.

A faint, very faint pang.

“Go to bed,” she said tiredly. “We’ll talk in the morning.”

“In the morning?”

“Yes, in the morning. I’ll tell you what I’ve decided. For now, go.”

Darius nodded, stunned, and shuffled off to the bedroom.

Kiana remained standing in the kitchen, looking out the window.

Dawn was breaking outside, the gray pre‑dawn sky slowly pushing back the darkness.

The city was waking up slowly, reluctantly.

Darius’s phone vibrated again in the hallway.

Kiana walked out and picked it up from the floor.

Another message from Ms. Sterling.

Darius, they’re questioning me. They’re saying this is attempted felony theft. What should I do?

Kiana smirked and put the phone back down.

Let Darius deal with his mother himself.

She had played her part.

She returned to the kitchen and sat by the window.

Streetlights were still on, even though the sky was already light.

A few pedestrians hurried about their business.

A truck rumbled in the distance.

An ordinary morning.

Only for her, this day was a turning point.

Kiana pulled her phone from her robe pocket and texted her friend Shauna.

Hey, can I come over today? I need to talk.

The reply came almost instantly.

Of course. What happened?

I’ll tell you when I see you. I’ll be over around ten.

Kiana put her phone away and leaned back in her chair.

Inside, she was calm.

Not happy, not sad—just calm, like after a long illness, when the crisis has passed and all that remains is to wait for recovery.

She had lived with Darius for five years.

Five years of hope, habit, and compromise.

Five years of the illusion that everything would somehow work out.

But now the illusions were gone.

Only facts remained.