The Silver Ridge mansion—the one with the infinity pool overlooking the valley and the chef’s kitchen and the wine cellar and the guest houses—that was purchased with my money, financed with my credit, and held in my name on the deed.
The sports car that Anthony drove with such casual ownership, the one he used to impress business associates and friends—that was leased under my business account.
The investment portfolios that generated income, the company shares that represented decades of my work building the consulting firm from the ground up, the various pieces of real estate scattered across California as investment properties—all of it was in my name.
Anthony didn’t actually own anything. He didn’t own the life he was living. He didn’t own the comfort or the security or the status. He only had access to those things because I had allowed it. Because I had opened doors and paid bills and signed documents and authorized access.
And access could be revoked.
I didn’t go home that night. The thought of returning to that empty mansion—the place where I’d waited for him to call, where I’d tried to convince myself that his distance was temporary, that his lack of interest in me was about his own struggles rather than a reflection of his actual feelings—that thought was unbearable.
Instead, I checked into a luxury hotel near the bay, the kind of place where the concierge doesn’t ask questions and the rooms smell like expensive linens and the service is so seamless that you forget you’re in a hotel at all. From the window of my suite, I could see the bay spreading out beneath the moonlight, and I felt something like peace.
Then I called my attorney.
“Put the Silver Ridge house on the market immediately,” I said, my voice steady and clear. “I want it sold within forty-eight hours. List it at a significant discount if necessary. I don’t care about the price. I care about speed.”
My attorney didn’t ask questions. She knew the situation. She’d been advising me as things had deteriorated over the past months.
“Consider it done,” she said simply.
Next, I called my financial advisor—a woman named Patricia, ironically, who’d managed my portfolio for over a decade and who understood my finances more thoroughly than almost anyone else.
“Freeze every joint account,” I instructed. “Cancel all additional credit cards. Remove digital access. I want a complete separation of our financial lives. Today. Not tomorrow. Today.”
“Are you sure?” she asked, which was her way of checking that I understood the implications of what I was asking.
“Completely sure,” I replied.
By the next morning, it was done. The house was listed with a below-market price that ensured immediate interest. The joint accounts had been frozen. The credit cards that Anthony had used casually for years, spending money without checking balances or worrying about consequences, had been cancelled. The various access cards that granted him entry to properties and accounts had been disabled.
I’d essentially pulled the plug on the comfortable lifestyle that he’d been living at my expense.
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