Part 2: Last night, I heard my husband giving my P…

“Justice prevailed, then.”

“Yep,” Shauna nodded on the other end. “You know that saying, ‘You reap what you sow’? They sowed greed and deceit, and that’s what they harvested.”

Kiana finished her tea and looked out the window.

Outside the glass, the bright summer sun was shining, birds were singing, and flowers were blooming in the little community garden by her building.

Justice really doesn’t always come through the police.

Sometimes it comes through three dollars on a card, a mother’s greed, and your own foresight.

And then life sorts everything out itself.

Kiana smiled.

She was free, happy, and calm.

Summer was ahead of her with new plans and new opportunities.

The past stayed exactly where it belonged—in the past.

She stood up, walked to the window, and opened it wide.

Fresh air rushed into the room, bringing with it the scent of cut grass and warm asphalt.

Life continued, and it was beautiful.

You know, looking back now, Kiana realized something simple but powerful.

Peace begins when you stop letting the wrong people live rent‑free in your heart.

She had thought losing her husband would break her, but it actually set her free.

Life has a funny way of rewarding those who choose self‑respect over comfort.

These days, she woke up grateful, not bitter.

She smiled because she finally learned that protecting your boundaries isn’t selfish—it’s self‑love.

And I hope her story reminds you of that, too.

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Thank you for listening and sharing your precious time with me.

Darius never brought her coffee in bed, not even during the first year of their marriage, when they were still playing the part of lovebirds.

The most he would do was grumble from the doorway,

“Get up, I boiled the kettle.”

“Why are you up so early?” she asked, propping herself up on her elbows.

He smiled too wide.

“Oh, I slept great. I wanted to… surprise you.”

That momentary, barely perceptible pause before he said “surprise” was what gave him away.

Kiana took the mug and sipped the coffee.

It was sweet, even though she hadn’t taken sugar in her coffee in about five years.

“Thank you,” she said. “It’s delicious.”

He left for the kitchen, whistling something cheerful, and Kiana remained sitting there, looking out the bedroom window at the gray apartment buildings and the faint outline of downtown in the distance.

Outside, a fine October drizzle was falling, gray and tiresome, just like her growing anxiety.

At work that day in the small construction company’s office on the edge of their midwestern city, she tried to focus on the numbers.

Accounting was a refuge for those who didn’t want to think about life.

Columns, spreadsheets, reconciliation reports—the main thing was not to get distracted.

But her thoughts kept buzzing around her like persistent flies.

Darius was acting strange.

Not just strange—suspicious.

He had become overly attentive, overly caring.

It was unusual and felt more unsettling than if he had simply been rude or hostile.

On Friday, he bought her flowers, a big bouquet of white and yellow blooms wrapped in crinkly cellophane, “just because.”

Kiana took the bouquet, thanked him, and went to find a vase.

Her hands were shaking.

In their five years together, Darius had only bought her flowers twice—on her birthday and sometimes on Mother’s Day—and even that had been inconsistent.

“Do you like them?” he asked, peeking into the kitchen.

“Very much,” she replied, trimming the stems with scissors. “They’re beautiful.”

He stood in the doorway, his hands shoved into his jeans pockets, looking at her as if he wanted to say something, but he didn’t.

He just nodded and walked into the living room.

Kiana set the vase on the windowsill and wiped her hands on a dish towel.

Something was brewing.

She felt it in her skin, her nerves, that ancient female instinct that never lied.

By evening, Darius started asking questions.

They were sitting in the small eat‑in kitchen.

She was warming up dinner while he scrolled on his phone.

Suddenly, without looking up, he said,

“Hey, how much have you saved up for the renovation?”

Kiana froze with the ladle in her hand.

“Why do you ask?”

“Just curious. You wanted to redo the kitchen, right? Do you have enough money?”

She slowly ladled the soup into their bowls.

“Yes. I have enough.”

“You sure? Maybe it’s better to save a little more. Don’t rush it.”

Kiana sat across from him and picked up her spoon.

“Darius, I’ve been saving for three years. I have enough.”

He nodded, but it was clear her answer didn’t satisfy him.

He was expecting something else—numbers, maybe, specifics.

“And how much is there in total?” he asked, as if casually. “You know, in the account.”

She looked him straight in the eyes.

“Enough.”

He offered a tense, strained laugh.

“Okay, okay. If you don’t want to say, don’t. I just wanted to know in case you needed help.”

Help.

From Darius, who hadn’t offered to chip in for groceries even once in their five years of marriage.

Kiana finished her soup in silence.

Everything inside her went cold, but her face remained calm.

That was her greatest talent—never showing what was happening inside.

Money, she thought.

So it was about the money.

She really did have a significant amount in her account—over a hundred and twenty thousand dollars.

It was an inheritance from her grandmother Ruby, the only person who had ever truly loved Kiana without conditions.

Her grandmother had passed away two years ago, leaving her a small condo and her savings.

Kiana sold the condo, added the money to her own savings, and decided to set it aside slowly—for the kitchen renovation she dreamed of, maybe a vacation, or just a rainy‑day fund.

Darius knew about the inheritance.

Two years ago, he’d even tried to suggest she invest the money in some friend’s business venture.

Kiana refused, gently but firmly.

Since then, the topic of money hadn’t come up between them—until this week.

On Saturday, Darius started taking an interest in her purse.

At first it was subtle, little things like,

“Your phone wasn’t ringing, was it? I thought I heard something.”

Then he rummaged around “looking for a charger,” claiming his cord was broken.

Kiana watched as he quickly glanced at her wallet lying on the dresser.

On Sunday, he asked if she wanted to open a joint bank account.

“It’s easier that way,” he argued. “We can save together, spend together. We’re family, Kiki.”

Kiana stood at the bedroom mirror, braiding her hair, and looked at his reflection.

He was sitting on the edge of the bed, just as sweet and caring—and lying.

Lying so badly it was almost awkward to watch.

“I’m fine with my own account,” she replied calmly. “I’m used to it.”

He frowned.

“That’s silly. We’ve been together for so many years, and you still act like a stranger.”

“I’m not a stranger. I’m just used to managing my own money.”

He didn’t press it, but he was moody and dark all day.

Kiana thought, remembered, and analyzed.

Five years ago, she’d married Darius almost by chance.

He was charming, easygoing, and knew how to say the right things at the right time.

She was tired of being alone.

She was thirty‑two, and everyone around her kept saying,

“It’s time. It’s time. It’s time.”

So she gave in.

The first year was tolerable.

Not bliss, but not hell either.

Just ordinary life.

He worked as a warehouse manager for a regional distribution company.

She managed the accounts for a local construction firm.

They watched TV shows in the evenings and went to his mother’s small weekend place about fifteen miles out of town on Saturdays.

Miss Patricia Sterling—her mother‑in‑law—was the true engine of all the problems in their marriage.

She appeared in their lives with alarming regularity.

One minute she needed help with her property taxes, the next she needed to borrow money for prescription meds, or she just needed to come over and sit because she was “lonely.”

Kiana endured it at first out of politeness, then out of habit.

Ms. Sterling was an imposing woman—tall, substantial, with neatly styled hair and a perpetually displeased expression.

She moved through the world as if it owed her something.

Darius owed her, and her daughter‑in‑law certainly owed her, too.

Two years ago, when Kiana got the inheritance, the mother‑in‑law suddenly became especially sweet.

She would bring over pastries, ask about Kiana’s health, and even offer compliments.

Kiana wasn’t fooled.

She saw how Ms. Sterling looked at her new purse, the updated furniture, and her latest model phone.

Back then, the mother‑in‑law would drop hints about how nice it would be to help a “poor senior citizen,” how small her Social Security check was, and how expensive life had gotten.

Kiana would nod, sympathize—but never gave her money.

Ms. Sterling took offense and didn’t call for three months.

Now, apparently, she had decided to operate through her son.

Kiana went to bed late.

Darius was already snoring, sprawled out over half the bed.

She lay there staring at the ceiling and knew something big was about to happen.

A strange calm grew inside her.

Not fear, not panic—just a profound stillness.

About three years ago, she had asked him to take money out of an ATM for her because she couldn’t get away from work.

He did it and brought the cash.

She hadn’t worried then that he might remember the PIN.

Now, that was to her advantage.

Her main card was in a different section of the wallet.

Its PIN was new, different.

Darius didn’t know it and wouldn’t find out.

Kiana went into the neighborhood grocery store on the corner, bought bread, milk, and eggs, then stepped outside and stood by the pharmacy window, looking at the vitamin ads taped to the glass.

Life went on.

People rushed to their jobs.

Buses rattled at the stops.

A crow cawed in the distance.

An ordinary day.

She returned home around noon.

Darius was sitting in the kitchen drinking coffee and looking out the window at the parking lot.

When she walked in, he spun around sharply.

“Where were you?”

“At the store.”

Kiana put the bag on the counter.

“We were out of groceries.”

He nodded, but his eyes were suspicious.

“Hey, you haven’t changed your card recently, have you? The PIN or anything?”

Kiana took the milk out of the bag and put it in the fridge.

“No. Why?”

“Oh, just wondering. Maybe you should, for security.”

“I don’t see the point. Everything’s fine with mine.”

He paused, then stood up and left the kitchen.

Kiana heard him pacing around the apartment, opening drawers, closing them, then silence again.

In the evening, he went out, saying he needed to meet a friend to discuss work issues.

Kiana didn’t ask any questions, just nodded and wished him a good night.

She was finally alone.

She sat by the living room window with a cup of tea and watched the street.

The streetlights had come on, casting yellow patches on the pavement.

The wind chased fallen leaves across the sidewalk.

It was beautiful, really.

Fall had always been her favorite time of year.

Kiana thought of Grandmother Ruby.

She had a gift for finding beauty in simple things—a cup of tea with honey, an old book with yellowed pages, the evening stillness on the back porch.

She used to say,

“Kiki, remember this. People come and go, but you stay with yourself. So take care of yourself and don’t let anyone stomp on what’s inside.”

Back then, Kiana nodded without truly understanding.