Nancy valued love, trust, and fairness in a marriage. For two years, she faithfully contributed her share of the rent, believing her husband was handling it honestly. But when she discovered that he and his mother had been secretly pocketing her money all along, she decided it was time for payback—a lesson they’d never forget.
When Jeremy and I tied the knot, we agreed to keep everything equal, including the rent. He took charge of finding the apartment and told me the rent was $2,000 per month. Every month, without question, I handed him my $1,000, trusting that he was sending it to the landlord as promised.
For two years, I never suspected a thing.
Then, one chilly December evening, everything changed.
I got stuck in the elevator with a neighbor, and we started chatting to pass the time. That’s when she casually said something that made my stomach drop:
“Oh, you’re in Mrs. Lorrie and Jeremy’s place, right?”
Mrs. Lorrie. Jeremy’s mother.
Feeling a sudden wave of confusion, I hesitated before asking what she meant. Oblivious to the bombshell she had just dropped, the neighbor continued cheerfully:
“Yeah! Jeremy’s mom has owned that apartment for years. She used to rent it out before he moved in with his ex. And now, you guys!”
My entire body went numb. I hadn’t been paying rent—I had been unknowingly handing my money straight to Jeremy and his mother.
For two whole years, I had unknowingly funneled $24,000 directly into their pockets.
I barely stepped inside before fury threatened to consume me. But I didn’t lose my temper. No, I picked up my phone and called Jeremy instead.
“Hey, honey,” I said in the sweetest voice. “Remind me—when is rent due again?”
“December 28,” he answered casually, unaware.
Perfect.
For the next two weeks, I played the role of the devoted partner—laughing at his jokes, preparing dinner, pretending everything was normal.
But in the background? I was carefully crafting my revenge.
As usual, on the 27th, I handed over my $1,000 for rent without hesitation.
Then came December 28—the day of reckoning.
That morning, I packed up every single thing I owned and headed straight to the bank.
We had a shared account—one where my paycheck had been deposited each month.
I drained it completely. And the best part? I had already secured my own place, funded entirely with JEREMY’S MONEY.
Now, it was time for the final act—the grand finale.
When Jeremy came home, he walked into an empty apartment.
Well, almost empty.
Taped to the window was a single letter.
Dear Jeremy,
Hope you’re enjoying YOUR apartment.
Since you and your mother had such a great time scamming me for two years, I thought it was only fair to return the favor.
My rent for January? Already covered—by you.
And don’t bother trying to call me. You’re blocked.
Happy New Year, loser.
—Nancy
A week later, I ran into Jeremy’s mother at the grocery store.
“Nancy,” she gasped, gripping my cart. “Please, let me explain—”
“Explain what, Mrs. Lorrie?” I interrupted coldly. “How you and your son stole $24,000 from me?”
“We were planning to tell you—”
“Oh? And when exactly? After I’d funded another year of your mortgage?”
Her face fell, the guilt washing over her. “Jeremy’s a mess. He’s drinking, losing weight—”
I leaned in, my voice firm. “You’re going to tell your son that if he doesn’t agree to my divorce terms—including full repayment of every cent I covered—I’ll be filing fraud charges against both of you.”
Three months later, I sat in my new apartment, freshly signed divorce papers in hand.
Jeremy had caved—full repayment, plus interest.
Jeremy rang my phone 27 times that night. I ignored every single call.
His mother tried too. Blocked.
Then the messages started pouring in—friends warning me that Jeremy was spiraling, raving about how I had “taken HIS money.”
The irony was almost poetic. Did I feel guilty? Not in the slightest. Because for two years, I had been nothing but their pawn. For two years, they had drained me without hesitation.
Ladies, when something feels wrong, trust that feeling. And if a man thinks he can outsmart you, make sure you outplay him. Because in the end, con artists get exactly what’s coming to them. And I made sure Jeremy and his mother got what they deserved.
Some might see it as ruthless. I see it as justice.