Four years of marriage taught me that sometimes the person sharing your bed is the one holding the knife to your back. I never thought my husband would be that person… until he convinced me to sell the last piece of my father I had left.
My childhood apartment always smelled like cinnamon and old books. Dad used to say it was the magic of brick walls… they absorbed life and gave it back when you needed it most. Standing in that sunlit living room the day after his funeral, I could almost hear his laughter bouncing off the worn hardwood floors.
“You’ll never have to worry, Nance,” he’d told me just weeks before cancer took him. His hand trembled as he signed the deed transfer. “This place is yours. It’s my legacy to you.”
Three years later, I sat at my kitchen table across from my husband, watching his hands shake. He looked distressed.
“Talk to me, Conrad. What’s wrong?” I reached for his fingers, but he pulled away, dragging both hands through his dark hair.
“It’s gone, Nancy. All of it. Marcus cleaned us out.”
“What do you mean ‘cleaned us out’?”
Conrad’s eyes were bloodshot when they finally met mine. “He left the agency… and took our biggest clients. The accounts are empty.” He slammed his fist on the table, making me jump. “Four years of building that business, and he walks away with everything. He screwed me over, Nancy. I’m… I’m buried in debt.”
“But how could he just…?”
“Because I trusted him! God, I’m such an idiot. I co-signed those expansion loans. The creditors don’t care that he’s gone… they’re coming after me.”
I watched him pace our kitchen like a wounded animal. In our four years of marriage, I’d never seen him like this.
“How bad is it?”
“We could lose the house, Nance.”
“There must be something we can do. Savings? My salary—”
“Not enough. Not even close.” He knelt before me suddenly, taking my hands in his. “There’s only one thing valuable enough.”
“What?”
“Your dad’s apartment.” His eyes held mine, glistening with unshed tears. “I wouldn’t ask if there was any other way.”
“Dad’s house? But it’s all I have left of him.”
He squeezed my hands until they almost hurt. “It’s just bricks and mortar, Nancy. Your dad would want us to survive. To have a future. Please help me… please.”
When his tears finally fell, mine followed. And I nodded.
“Okay, we’ll sell it.”
Conrad pulled me into his arms, his breath warm against my neck. “I’ll make this right. I promise. One day we’ll have ten apartments just like it.”
I clung to him, grieving a loss I hadn’t braced for… not again. To Conrad and everyone else, it was just an apartment… just walls made of brick and mortar. But to me, it was a shrine. A place where my childhood lived. Where Dad’s laugh still echoed. Where everything that ever felt like home was.
The “SOLD” sign appeared faster than I was ready for. The price of my father’s memory was $310,000. I signed the papers while something inside me screamed to stop.
“You did the right thing,” Conrad said that night, opening a bottle of champagne as if we were celebrating instead of mourning. “I’ve already contacted the creditors. We’re going to be okay.”
I forced a smile. “Dad would be happy we’re going to be okay.”
Conrad kissed my forehead. “Your father would be proud of you. You’re so selfless. Not many wives would do what you just did.”
I should have caught the less desperate and more calculating shift in his tone. But grief has a way of blinding you.