The teller’s smile faltered the moment she pulled up the account. I expected two thousand dollars, maybe a little interest. Instead, her eyes flicked from the screen to my face as if she were measuring how much truth I could stand. There weren’t thousands in that account. There were hundreds of thousands. Money that had been sitting there quietly while I counted coupons and told my children I was “fine.”
It wasn’t an apology. It was a confession written in numbers and deposits, in dates that matched years when Walter had sworn we were “barely getting by.” There were transfers from accounts I’d never heard of, regular payments labeled with the name of a company that didn’t exist. The manager asked if I wanted to bring in my husband to discuss it. I told her he’d already left. Then I walked out of the bank with a new understanding: the real betrayal hadn’t started with Marcy’s red car. It had started long before, in secrets he never expected me to live long enough—or brave enough—to uncover.
