ADVERTISEMENT
The bank asked me twice to verify the amount.
Every cent sitting in our joint savings account.
I moved it into the new account bearing only my name—the account Carter had no idea existed, the account Margaret had advised me to use to protect the funds from “continued marital waste.” Such a refined expression for a husband using his wife’s hard-earned money to finance champagne for another woman.
The old Evelyn whispered one final warning.
This will make it real.
Somewhere your wife has never touched.
The screen spun for three seconds.
Transfer completed.
The joint account balance instantly fell to zero.
The credit cards came next.
Two were connected to the joint account. One officially belonged to Carter, but I was listed as an authorized administrator because I had managed the bills for years while he played the role of visionary entrepreneur. I called the bank and reported suspicious activity along with a possible card compromise. That wasn’t even a lie. A husband funneling marital funds into an affair certainly seemed suspicious to me.
I leaned back in my dining chair and checked the clock.
By now, Carter and Vanessa had likely cleared immigration. They had probably collected their luggage. Maybe she had rested her head on his shoulder during the taxi ride. Maybe he had pointed toward the skyline like a wealthy man, a romantic man, a man convinced he had won.
I imagined them arriving at the hotel.
Golden lights. Marble floors. Men in tailored suits opening doors. Vanessa stepping out in heels, her hair shining, fully convinced she had been chosen over a wife.
I wished I could witness the moment the first card was declined.
My phone rang at 9:14 p.m.
Carter.
I let it ring.
He called again immediately.
Then again.
Then the messages started arriving.
Evie, call me. Urgent.
There’s a problem with the cards. Did the bank call you?
Evelyn, answer your phone.
I sipped my wine.
Another message appeared.
This is serious. The hotel says payment didn’t go through. I need you to call Chase right now.
Then:
Why is the joint account empty?
There it was.
The exact moment the ground vanished beneath him.
The phone rang again.
This time, I answered.
I didn’t say hello.
Carter exploded through the speaker.
“What the hell is going on? Why are the cards frozen? Why is there no money in the account?”
Behind him, I could hear the sounds of a large lobby. Rolling suitcases. Distant conversations. Someone speaking polished professional English. Vanessa whispering sharply nearby.
I pictured him standing beneath a chandelier, face red with panic.
“Where are you, Carter?” I asked.
Silence.
A brief silence, but a satisfying one.
“What?”
“Where are you?”
“I told you. Denver.”
“You’re in Dubai.”
He said nothing.
“At the Burj Al Arab,” I continued. “With Vanessa Hale. In the panoramic suite with rose petals and champagne. Unless, of course, they reassigned your room after your payment failed.”
His breathing became uneven.
“Evie—”
“I found the emails.”
“Listen to me.”
“I found the reservation.”
“It’s not what you think.”
“I found the messages where you said I’d never suspect a thing.”
That ended his excuses.
For several seconds, the only sounds were the lobby around him. A suitcase wheel squeaked across the floor. Vanessa hissed, “Carter, fix this.” A hotel employee said, “Sir, without valid payment, we cannot release the suite.”
My smile felt cold as ice.
“Is Vanessa enjoying her first trip with you?” I asked.
“Evelyn, please,” Carter said, lowering his voice. “Don’t do this right now.”
“Do what?”
“Humiliate me.”
ADVERTISEMENT