Closing a $10 million deal feels like standing on top of the world. I remember thinking, This is the moment I’ll remember forever. I was right—just not for the reasons I expected.
I brought home the contract and the “celebratory handoff”: a sleek leather duffel filled with placeholder cash—the kind used for movies, not real transactions. The actual money would hit my account in a few days.
Ria was lounging in silk pajamas, a glass of red in hand, when I set the bag on the table.
“All that money… just sitting there. You trust me not to run away with it?” she joked.
Her smile was playful, but her eyes weren’t.
“Of course,” I said. “You’re my wife.”
She took the bag lightly from my hands. “I’ll keep it in the closet tonight. Just in case.” Her smirk was pure theater—Ria had always loved turning life into a performance.
The next morning, the silence was wrong. I reached for her side of the bed—cold. I called her name—nothing. Kitchen, bathroom, living room—empty.
Then I saw the note on the counter:
Thanks for the money. I’m starting fresh with my boyfriend. Good luck starting from scratch.
I read it three times, disbelief crashing over me. Then… I laughed. She’d stolen a bag full of prop cash. My wife had run away with paper.
It wasn’t the money that hurt—it was the performance. Our marriage, I realized, had been one long act.
I pictured Ria and her new man planning their glamorous escape, only to unzip the bag and find worthless paper. Somehow, that image gave me closure.
The deal was still mine. The loss was hers. And as I started over, I made myself a promise: never again mistake the costume for the character.