Allowance, Lies, and a Secret Ex
/1/103422/coverbig.jpg?v=2a0cc841fae35fa4c9238ae8e89eb48a&imageMogr2/format/webp)
eaving his phone behind. A bank alert flashed across the sc
pay was only $4,000 a month, and I struggled to cover our f
ses, and his parents, who knew all along
ble what he claimed, and our entire five-year marriage was built on a f
mple treats, all while he secretly funneled $150,000 of our mon
ence. I hired a lawyer and walked into that courtroom re
pte
Chandl
' s phone. He had left it when he rushed out for an emergency IT call. I wasn't usually o
hat said "don't look" and landed right on "what is this?" The message was clear, st
-wife. My stomach twisted. Why was Jerrold sending her $2,500 every month? W
t with the notification. Jackie Reid. Not a one-time thing, but a "mortgage p
ne call. "Everything okay, babe?" he asked, reaching for a glass of
sed, and his eyes narrowed, just for a split second, but I saw it. T
een still displaying the incriminating notification.
phone to my face, then to the floor. "Karly, I c
ammered against my ribs, a frantic drumbeat of disbelief and
a man who pretended to be struggling, while secretly bankrolling his past. Five years
e around. $4,000. And out of that, he gave me $1,200 for groceries, utilities, Leo' s daycare, everything
nd what he did. It wasn' t just a lie; it was a deliberate, calculated
ore me, the father of my child, suddenly felt like a stranger. The face I thought I
mortgage payment." This wasn't recent. This had been going on. Years. My en
e amount. The recipient. Jackie Reid. His ex-wife. The one he' d cheated on, the one
our every conversation, the unspoken burden. He was paying her mortgage. Our mortgage, the one we
m my hand, his face a mask of panic.
sland was between us. The physical distance felt necessa
n. "Explain how you' ve been funneling money to your ex-wife for five years?
. Silence stretched between us, thick and suf
nice for Leo, a new toy, a better pair of shoes, and had to hold back. My trust, so freely given, now felt like
ng, needing to hear the lie unravel completely. "Tell
nd four thousand. It fluctuates." He held o
I had maintained shattering. "You are
. He had accounts he managed himself. I knew his password for one of the joint
fers. Every month. Like clockwork. To Jackie Reid.
s a pact. A secret agreement made before our life together even trul
ifty thousand dollars. Money that could have gone to our family, to Leo' s college fund,
said to his sleeping form, the words bitter on my ton
e looked at me, confused, then his gaze
flat. "That's what this is about. Some deb
. it's complicated, Karly. It's an o
hile your current wife, the mother of your second child, is struggling to pay for groceries? While
st sat there, a pict
y me if you were still so entangled wit
s silence was deafening, a chasm bet
Do you have any idea what I' ve given up
o make things right, about his famil
e systematically defrauded your own family. Your
wide and vacant. He couldn't ev
ed with an icy contempt. "Every time, you looked me in the eye and lied. You sai
d. The tru
ted. And the spending patterns. New golf clubs. Expensive gadgets he'd claimed wer
p. My hands were shaking, not from anger,
," I said, my voice devoid
after me, "Karly, please! Don't do this!" But I didn't look back. My mind was already mapping out a path, a future th