“Ms. Sterling. Hello.”
She choked mid‑sob.
“You… This is all your fault.”
“I’m at fault for protecting my own money?”
Kiana chuckled softly.
“Interesting logic.”
“You set us up on purpose.”
“You set yourselves up when you decided to steal my money. I simply took precautions.”
“I… I didn’t mean to steal. It was a misunderstanding.”
“Of course,” Kiana said calmly, almost mockingly. “You just accidentally drove to the ATM late at night with my card and my PIN. A pure coincidence.”
Ms. Sterling gasped with indignation.
“You… you’re heartless. My Social Security is small. I have nothing to live on, and you have over a hundred thousand just sitting there. You could have helped.”
“I could have,” Kiana agreed. “If you had asked me like a human being. Instead you tried to rob me in the middle of the night, conspiring with my husband.”
Silence.
Then her mother‑in‑law spoke softer, almost pleadingly.
“Kiki, please don’t file a report. I beg you. I’ll never ever do this again. Just don’t file it.”
Kiana was silent for a moment, considering whether to file or not.
On the one hand, she wanted to teach this brazen woman a lesson, to show that not everything is forgiven.
On the other, dealing with the police, investigations, statements—was it worth the hassle?
“Fine,” she said finally. “I won’t file a report. But on one condition.”
“What is it?”
“You and Darius never appear in my life again. No calls, no visits, no requests. I’m filing for divorce, settling everything quickly and quietly, and you both disappear forever.”
Ms. Sterling sniffled.
“Okay. Okay. Whatever you say. Just don’t file the report. We have a deal.”
Kiana disconnected the call and handed the phone back to Darius.
He took it with trembling hands, looking at her forlornly.
“You’re really not going to file a report?”
“I’m not,” she answered. “But on the condition that you move out of here today. Take your things and leave—and never come back.”
He nodded without looking up.
“I… I understand.”
Kiana turned and walked into the bedroom to collect her bag.
Behind her, she heard him stand up, walk to the room, and begin stuffing his things into plastic bags.
Half an hour later, he stood in the hallway with two suitcases, pale and defeated.
“Kiki,” he said softly, “I’m sorry. I really didn’t mean it.”
She raised her hand, stopping him.
“Don’t. Just go.”
He nodded, opened the door, and left.
The door closed quietly, almost soundlessly.
Kiana remained standing in the entryway, staring at the closed door.
Inside she felt empty.
Not pain, not sadness—just emptiness.
Like after a long illness when the fever has broken and only weakness remains.
She went back to the kitchen and sat by the window.
Outside, the wind was rustling, chasing gray clouds across the sky.
The day promised to be gloomy.
Kiana pulled out her phone and texted Shauna.