Continuation..

I slammed on the brakes, my heart pounding. “What do you mean, they’re at my house?” I gasped.

“Matt. The agent. The notary. Everyone,” Sarah said breathlessly. “They’re signing the sale documents without you. He’s trying to put the house solely in his name.”

My stomach dropped. For five years, Matt and I had built that house into a home — the house I painted, decorated, loved. The house I thought we’d share forever.

Without another thought, I made a U-turn so hard my tires screamed. The lasagna slid off the seat, sauce splattering everywhere. My hands shook as I gripped the wheel.

When I finally pulled into the driveway, three cars were already there — Matt’s, our real estate agent’s, and another I didn’t recognize. Through the window, I saw them at the kitchen table, papers spread out, pens in hand.

I burst through the door. “What’s going on here?” I demanded.

Matt froze. His face went pale. “You weren’t supposed to be back yet,” he muttered.

The agent looked horrified. “Mrs. Keller! I thought you were aware—”

Aware of what?” I snapped.

Sarah’s voice echoed in my head: He’s signing you off the deal.

I turned to Matt. “You were going to buy this house without me. In your name only. Why?”

He didn’t answer. His mother’s “sickness” had been a setup. He’d sent me away to keep me from signing.

Tears blurred my vision as Sarah walked in behind me — she’d driven straight from her office. “This transaction is VOID,” she announced, slapping a document on the table. “Mrs. Keller is a co-tenant. Any attempt to transfer ownership without her consent is illegal.”

Matt’s expression hardened, but he knew he’d been caught. The agent quickly packed up, muttering something about “not getting involved.”

I stood there shaking, realizing how far he’d gone to cut me out of the life we’d built. The trust, the love, the partnership — all gone in an instant.

As Sarah led me outside, she whispered, “You just saved yourself from losing everything.”

I glanced at the lasagna, cold and ruined on the car seat — a reminder of how much I’d given, and how much I’d almost lost.

That night, I didn’t just drive away from Linda’s dinner.
I drove away from a marriage built on lies.

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