
Four years into marriage, I learned that the person sharing your bed could also be the one stabbing you in the back. I never imagined it’d be Conrad—until he begged me to sell the only thing my father left me: his apartment.He claimed his business partner had betrayed him, that debt would bury us. In tears, he swore selling Dad’s apartment would save us. Blinded by love and grief, I agreed. The champagne popped the night the sale went through. “To new beginnings,”
he said. I didn’t realize he meant a new life—with someone else.Two months later, I found a receipt for a $3,000 necklace—and a voicemail from a woman laughing about how easily he “bamboozled” me. Turns out, Conrad hadn’t been screwed over. He and his partner sold their agency for $600K. He forged my signature, pocketed the money, and planned a new business—and life—with his mistress,
Lydia.I didn’t confront him. I built a case.With help from his ex-partner and a lawyer, I gathered evidence: forged docs, photos, receipts, a recorded video call where Lydia laughed about using my wedding photo in investor pitches.On our anniversary, I handed Conrad a flash drive. “You have 72 hours to return everything,”
I told him. “Or it all goes to court.”He lost. Lydia vanished. And then fate stepped in.The apartment sale fell through due to a title issue. Legally, it was still mine.I stood in the doorway of my childhood home and whispered to the walls, “I got it back, Dad.”Karma? Maybe.Closure? Absolutely.