I Married My School Sweetheart – On Our First Anniversary, I Overheard a Phone Call That Made Me Gasp

* The “Vanessa” on Aaron’s phone had been my stepmother; only older family members usually used her middle name.
* The separate bank accounts.
* The locked drawer clearly held whatever my husband had been hiding.
* The way my husband kept nudging me to put the house in his name.

Diane. It had always been Diane!

“You two know each other,” I said. It was not a question.

Aaron finally brought his hand forward, placed a stack of documents on the counter, and slid them toward me.

“Sign the top page, Sandra. You’re going to sign either way. You have no savings that aren’t tangled up with mine, and a father who’ll back whatever Diane tells him to back. You’ve got nothing and nowhere to go. So let’s stop pretending you have a choice and start being honest with each other. It feels better. Trust me,” Aaron said.

He smiled as if he were doing me a kindness.

“You’re right. We’ve known each other since senior year of high school, by the way. Your stepmom approached me at your mom’s funeral.”

“You’ve been so generous,” Diane added sweetly. “All Aaron had to do was be patient with you. Keep you comfortable and waiting. That part was just for my enjoyment. Call it ‘playing the long game.’ And you stuck it out and finally ‘won’!”

I gripped the counter so I would not sway.

“And the proposal?”

“That was phase two,” Aaron said, as if he were presenting a business plan. “Marriage gives me legal standing. Diane buys the property through me. Quiet, clean, family business.”

My stepmother tapped the folder.

“Just a quitclaim deed on the house, dear. And a small acknowledgment of the trust. Aaron will handle the rest.”

I looked down at the papers. Then I looked back up at the woman who had spent 20 years calling me ungrateful for inheriting my own mother’s home.

“You paid a teenage boy to date me?”

“I invested,” Diane corrected. “In what should have been mine.”

I let her have that moment. I let Aaron pick up the pen and click it open, ready to guide me through where to sign.

Then I picked up my phone from the table, tapped a couple of things, and set it on the counter, screen facing up.

The recording timer was still running.

“Forty-seven minutes,” I said. “It started the second I heard your voice through the bedroom door, Aaron. Before I ever walked back to pour the wine. I heard your call in the bedroom, and I recorded every word she just said. I just sent a copy of the conversation to a trusted source.”

Diane’s smile froze halfway across her cheek.

“Oh, and one more thing.”

I reached into the drawer beneath the silverware and pulled out a thin envelope I had kept beneath the takeout menus for three months.

“Mr. Whitfield says hello.”

Aaron’s pen stopped clicking.

“He’s my grandma’s attorney,” I explained. “I went to him in August. Not because I knew, but because the fourth time Aaron asked me to add him to the deed, something in my stomach went quiet, and I told myself I was being paranoid the whole drive over.”

“But the trust was restructured, anyway. I’m the sole signatory, and it was independently witnessed. The house was never going to be yours, Aaron. Not even for a minute,” I told him.

Diane’s mouth opened, but no words came out.