“Thank you for the cream puffs,” Kiana replied politely.
Ms. Sterling nodded, adjusted her jacket, and headed for the door.
Right at the exit, she turned around.
“Kiki, think about what I said. Family is important. We have to help each other.”
Kiana looked her straight in the eye.
“Of course. I’ll be sure to think about it.”
The door closed.
Darius went back to the living room, turned on the TV, and sat on the couch.
Kiana followed him, picked up the dirty mugs from the coffee table, and carried them to the sink.
“Listen,” Darius started without turning his head, “Mom is really in a difficult spot. Maybe we should help her out after all. Just a little, like five thousand.”
Kiana washed the mug and placed it on the drying rack.
“Why does she need five thousand?”
He shrugged.
“To live on. To have some peace of mind.”
“Darius, your mother has Social Security and she has her condo. If she truly needs money, she can sell her condo like she said herself, or find a part‑time job.”
“At her age?”
Kiana turned around, wiping her hands on a towel.
“She’s sixty‑two. Plenty of women her age are working.”
Darius frowned.
“You’ve gotten so cold.”
“Not cold. Realistic.”
He didn’t answer.
They spent the rest of the evening in strained silence.
Kiana read a book.
Darius watched some reality show on TV, laughing a little too loudly at nothing.
Before bed, he went into the bathroom, splashed around for a while, then came out, lay down, and buried his face in his phone.
Kiana closed her book and lay down next to him.
The darkness was thick.
The wind rustled outside the window.
She heard Darius fidgeting under the blanket, typing something on his phone.
He was probably texting his mother, planning.
Kiana turned onto her side, facing the wall.
Inside, she was surprisingly calm, almost indifferent.
Five years of marriage, it turned out, could be wiped out by one conversation in the kitchen, one decision to steal a wife’s money, and a conspiracy with his mother.
She remembered how they met.
A typical story: mutual friends, a party, talking until morning.
Darius seemed interesting then, vibrant.
He joked, told stories, and knew how to listen.
Then came the flowers, the walks, the first kiss in the rain on a downtown corner.
Romance.
The wedding was modest.
Kiana insisted on it.
She didn’t want the grandeur, the guests, the debt from the banquet.
Darius easily agreed, saying the main thing was being together, not putting on a show.
Good words.
Too bad they were empty.
The next day, Kiana got up early.
Darius was still sleeping, taking up the whole bed.
She dressed quietly, took her purse, and left the apartment.
It was cool outside, smelling of wet leaves and someone’s chimney smoke from the older houses a few blocks away.
Kiana walked slowly, thinking over her plan.
The card with the three dollars was in her wallet.
The old PIN—3806—was still active on it.
Darius knew it.
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.
Now, she understood perfectly.
Darius returned late, around eleven.
He smelled of cigarettes and cold air, went to the bathroom, washed up, and went to bed silently.
Kiana lay down too, pulled the blanket up to her chin, and closed her eyes.
Everything inside her was prepared, tight like a bowstring before release.
All she had to do was wait.
Wait for them to take the first step—the final step, the one after which there would be no turning back.
Kiana smiled faintly in the darkness.
She wondered what they would feel when they realized the truth.
Fear, anger, shame.
Probably anger.
Shame was for people with a conscience.
She turned onto her side and finally drifted into a light, restless sleep.
Kiana woke up to silence.
A strange, thick, almost ringing silence.
It was dark outside the window.
The clock on the nightstand showed half past midnight.
She lay motionless, listening to her own breathing and to what was happening right next to her.
Darius was awake.
She felt it with her whole body, every nerve.
He lay still, but his breathing was uneven, wary, not like he was sleeping.
The minutes stretched into something that felt like hours.
Kiana didn’t move, keeping her eyes closed.
Everything inside clenched in anticipation.
Now, she thought.
Now something is going to happen.
And it did.
Darius carefully, almost soundlessly, pushed the blanket aside.
The bed creaked slightly under his weight.
He froze, apparently checking if she had woken up.
Kiana breathed steadily, deeply, feigning sleep.
He got up, walked to the door, and quietly closed it behind him.
Footsteps in the hall.
The squeak of a floorboard.
The click of the bathroom lock.
Kiana opened her eyes.
The darkness was dense, but she could distinguish the outlines of the furniture, the window, the dresser, the walls.
Her heart was beating steadily, almost calmly, but her hands trembled slightly as she raised them and clenched them into fists.
A muffled voice came from the bathroom.
Darius was speaking softly, in a half whisper, but the walls were thin—very thin.
“Mom, are you ready?”
A pause.
He was listening to Ms. Sterling’s reply.
“Write down the PIN. 3‑8‑0‑6. The card is in her purse. The black Midwest Trust one. Take it all. She’s got over a hundred and twenty thousand in there.”
Kiana closed her eyes.
There it was.
The exact thing she had been waiting for.
Now, in this moment, everything was decided, finally.
There was no more doubt, hesitation, or pity.
Only cold, clear certainty.
“Just tonight, so she doesn’t have time to block it in the morning,” Darius continued. “I’ll tell her tomorrow that the card was stolen on the bus. We’ll split it fifty‑fifty. Deal?”
Another pause.
Then he muttered a short,
“Go get it.”
Click.
The conversation was over.
Kiana lay there staring at the ceiling.
Inside, it was surprisingly quiet.
No pain, no disappointment.
Just a faint, almost ironic curiosity about what they would feel when everything went wrong.
Darius returned a couple of minutes later, lay down carefully, pulled up the blanket, and breathed unevenly, nervously.
He was clearly anxious.
Kiana smiled in the darkness.
Don’t worry, she thought.
You’ll be much more anxious soon.
She turned onto her side, getting comfortable.
She didn’t want to sleep, but she had to pretend.
She closed her eyes, relaxed her shoulders, and slowed her breathing.
Let him think she hadn’t heard anything.
Let him hope.
Time crawled by.
Kiana listened to the dripping faucet behind the wall, the wind whistling in the window frame, and Darius tossing and turning under the blanket.
He clearly couldn’t fall asleep.
He was probably running the plan through his head, imagining his mother withdrawing the money, how they would split the spoils, and how he would pretend to be shocked and outraged tomorrow.
Kiki, the card was stolen. Scammers. We need to call the bank immediately.
A pathetic performance—but they apparently believed it would work.
About thirty or forty minutes passed.
Kiana was starting to drift off for real when Darius’s phone suddenly vibrated fiercely on the nightstand.
He jumped as if he’d been stung, grabbed the phone, and stared at the screen.
Even in the dark, Kiana could see his face turn pale, almost gray.
The screen showed “Mom.”
The message was long.
The text flashed, but Kiana clearly saw the beginning.
Son, she knew everything. Something’s happening to me…
Darius froze.
Then he quickly turned and looked at his wife.
She lay motionless, eyes closed, breathing evenly and deeply.
He stared for ten seconds, then sprang out of bed and rushed out of the bedroom, leaving the door ajar.
Kiana opened her eyes.
The hall light came on.
She heard Darius pacing frantically around the apartment, muttering something under his breath.
Then the click of a lighter, the smell of cigarette smoke.
He was smoking right in the apartment, even though he always went out onto the small balcony for that.
She got up, put on her robe, and went into the hallway.
Darius stood by the window, holding the phone in one hand and a lit cigarette in the other.
His face was chalk‑white.
Drops of sweat glistened on his forehead.
“What happened?” Kiana asked calmly, leaning against the doorframe.
He flinched, turning around sharply.
“Nothing. Everything’s fine.”
“It doesn’t look fine. You’re pale and smoking indoors.”
He swallowed, looking away.
“Mom texted. She’s having trouble.”
“What kind of trouble?”
A pause.
Darius took a drag and exhaled the smoke out the cracked window.
“I don’t know exactly. Something with the bank. She went to the ATM, tried to withdraw money, and they blocked the card and called security. I don’t understand what’s going on.”
Kiana walked closer, looking at him intently.
“That’s odd. Why did she go to the ATM late at night?”
“How should I know? Maybe she needed cash urgently.”
Darius nervously extinguished the cigarette on the windowsill.
“Kiki, I don’t know. She wrote that it was a misunderstanding, that they accused her of attempted fraud. It’s nonsense.”
Kiana nodded.
“I see. And whose card was she trying to use?”
He froze, looking at her with a long, scrutinizing gaze.
Something flashed in his eyes—fear, suspicion, despair.
“Hers, probably. Whose else?”
“I don’t know. You know best.”
The silence stretched on.
They stood facing each other, and the air between them was so thick it could have been cut with a knife.
“I don’t know anything,” Darius finally choked out. “Absolutely nothing. It’s some kind of mistake.”
Kiana smirked.
“A mistake, of course.”
She turned and headed for the kitchen.
She turned on the light and put the kettle on.
Her hands were calm and steady.
Darius followed her, stopping by the table.
“Kiki,” he began cautiously, “did you, by any chance, change the PIN on your card?”
She turned around, raising an eyebrow.
“Yes. I did. Day before yesterday. Why?”
His face fell.
“Why?”