My Husband Left a $47 Dry Cleaning Receipt in His Pocket: It Exposed His Second Life

He took them, his eyes scanning the first page.

“What is this?” he stammered. “Sarah, this is crazy. Is this some kind of joke?”

“Your other suits are in Troy, right?” I asked, my voice completely flat. “The ones at Spotless Cleaners? The monthly account?”

His jaw dropped. He actually opened his mouth to speak, but no sound came out.

For a second, he looked like a fish out of water.

“I don’t know what you’re talking about,” he finally managed to say. But his hand was shaking so badly the paper was rustling.

“I moved the $214,000, Dave,” I said. “And Jim the accountant has your Chase statements. Have a nice night in Troy.”

I slid the door shut and locked the deadbolt.

He stood on the porch for ten minutes, banging on the door and yelling my name.

I didn’t answer. I went into the kitchen and made myself another cup of tea.

Eventually, he picked up his two cheap suits from the railing, walked back to his luxury SUV, and drove away.

That was six months ago.

Our first court date was last Tuesday. Dave’s attorney tried to argue that I had illegally cleared out our joint account.

But my attorney, Robert, just laid Jim’s forensic report on the table.

When the judge saw the monthly wire transfers to the Troy landlord and the utilities in Tiffany’s name, her face went very stern.

She looked directly at Dave.

“Mr. Miller,” she said, “you have been committing systematic financial fraud against your wife for three years. If you think you are touching a single cent of that $214,000, you are sorely mistaken.”

They settled on Friday.

I kept the Toledo house. I kept the $214,000.

And Dave got his six designer suits.

Yesterday, I finally had the old laminate kitchen countertops ripped out. The new ones are solid gray quartz.

I was standing in the kitchen this morning, watching the sun hit the new countertops. My sister came over with a box of donuts.

“It looks beautiful, Sarah,” she said, rubbing her hand over the cool stone.

“It does,” I said.

I didn’t use a coupon for the donuts either. I paid full price.

I still don’t really know how to feel about the twenty-three years we spent together, but for the first time in a very long time, I can finally breathe.

 


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End of story — Part 5 of 5

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