Serena had never been one to splurge. Even before marriage, she budgeted with the precision of someone who understood exactly how fragile financial stability could be. Growing up with a single father who worked three jobs, she learned young the importance of never assuming money would magically stretch.
After she married Julian, she carried the same habit into their life together: spreadsheets, envelopes, emergency funds, the works. Julian, on the other hand, was the kind of man who joked that “money always comes back around eventually.” He wasn’t reckless, not exactly, but he had a habit of smoothing over details he didn’t want to deal with, especially when it came to finances. When they moved into the small but sunlit house on Maple Row, Serena assumed everything was straightforward: they were renting from an elderly landlord Julian had spoken about warmly.
The rent wasn’t cheap, but the house was cozy, in a safe neighborhood, and had a generous backyard where Serena planned to grow her herbs one day. Each month, Serena carefully transferred her share of the rent money to Julian, and he assured her he handled it. For three years, she never questioned a thing.
It wasn’t until Julian left for a week-long work trip and a training seminar in another city that the illusion shattered. On the first day of his trip, Serena received a text around noon. Julian:
Hey sweetheart, can you drop off this month’s rent payment?
Totally slipped my mind with the travel prep. The landlord changed banks and asked for a direct deposit instead of cash. I’ll send you the info.
She didn’t mind. She had a flexible lunch break and figured it’d take ten minutes at most. Within seconds, Julian sent her a bank account number and a short message:
Just transfer it here.
It’s the landlord’s personal account now. Serena grabbed her purse, locked up the house, and headed to the bank. But the moment she filled out the deposit slip, confusion crept in.
The teller, a polite woman with kind eyes, typed in the account number and frowned. “That name looks familiar,” the teller murmured. “Are you sure this is correct?”
“I assume so,” Serena replied.
“It’s our landlord’s.”
The teller looked up again, this time with unmistakable surprise. “This… belongs to a woman named Marla Avery.”
Serena froze. Marla Avery.
Her mother-in-law. The same woman who visited once a month and sighed dramatically about how she “barely scraped by” on retirement income. The same woman who clutched her back whenever anyone mentioned housework but had no problem carrying a stack of her son’s leftovers home.
The same woman who made comments like, “You two really should consider moving somewhere cheaper,” as though she wasn’t comfortably sipping wine at their dinner table. “That must be a mistake,” Serena said quickly, her voice too tight. The teller glanced at the screen again, shaking her head.
“No mistake, ma’am. It’s definitely her.”
A nauseating thought formed in Serena’s mind. Why would the rent go to Marla’s personal account?