I sneaked home during my lunch break to check on my sick husband. I tried not to make a sound, but his voice echoed down the hall—low, urgent, nothing like the weak tone he’d been feigning for me. Then I heard words that had no place in our lives, and my stomach sank.

That night, I acted normal while observing him. He only coughed when I walked into the room.

The next morning he casually mentioned, “You may need to sign refinancing papers Friday.”

“Of course,” I replied—already scheduled to meet a real estate attorney.

On Thursday, my lawyer helped me file a Notice of Marital Interest, preventing any unilateral transfer of the house.

Friday morning, Gavin dressed sharply—nothing like a sick man.

“I’m going to the county office,” he said.

“I’m coming,” I answered.

At the clerk’s desk, he slid the deed forward confidently.

The clerk paused. “There’s a Notice of Marital Interest on file. This requires review.”

Gavin turned to me, anger barely contained.
“What did you do?”

“I protected myself.”

In the supervisor’s office, he called it “routine financial planning.” When asked if I consented, I said firmly, “No.”

He claimed my signature was included.

“If my signature appears, it’s forged,” I replied, placing printed bank alerts and LLC documents on the desk.

The transfer was halted.

Moments later, his phone rang. I heard a woman say, “I’m downstairs. Tell me it’s done.”

A tall woman in a black coat stood near the entrance, watching. She approached, irritation flashing across her face.

“I’m his wife,” I said before Gavin could speak.

She turned to him sharply. “You put my email on her bank account?”

He had no answer.