Last night, I heard my husband giving my PIN to his mother while I was asleep: ‘Take it all out, there’s over a hundred and twenty thousand dollars on it.’ I just smiled and went back to sleep. Forty minutes later, his phone buzzed with a text from his mom: “Son, she knew everything. Something’s happening to me…” Then the phone suddenly went dead. – usnews

Her mother‑in‑law looked up sharply.

“Do you really think so?”

“Of course. If you need money, that’s the logical option.”

Ms. Sterling went quiet, clearly expecting something else.

Then she smiled, but the smile was crooked.

“Yes, I guess so… for now. Maybe I don’t have to sell it. Maybe there’s another way.”

She stopped talking, staring at Kiana expectantly.

Darius was watching, too.

Both of them were waiting for the daughter‑in‑law to offer to help—to say, “Don’t sell it. Here is some money. Live in peace.”

Kiana finished her tea and stood up.

“I’m going to change clothes. Long day.”

She left the kitchen, feeling their two gazes on her back, one bewildered and one angry.

In the bedroom, she closed the door and sat on the edge of the bed.

Her hands were slightly trembling, not from fear, but from cold, quiet, grinding rage.

They wanted her money.

It was obvious.

Ms. Sterling hadn’t come for tea.

She had come to scope out the situation, to see if her daughter‑in‑law would succumb to pity.

And Darius was in on it, sitting right there, silent, waiting.

Kiana listened closely.

Voices started up again in the kitchen, quieter now, muffled.

She got up, went to the door, and cracked it open a sliver.

The words reached her in fragments.

“She won’t give,” Ms. Sterling hissed. “She’s greedy.”

“Mom, don’t say that. She’s just cautious,” Darius muttered.

“Cautious.”

She snorted.

“She has a hundred thousand just sitting there, and I’m rotting away on Social Security.”

“Quiet. She’ll hear.”

“Let her hear. I raised you by myself your whole life. Your father left when you were three. I worked two jobs, and now you marry this cold piece of work and you can’t even help me properly.”

Darius mumbled something unintelligible.

“We have to act,” Ms. Sterling hissed. “Do you understand? Otherwise, we won’t get anything. She’s not stupid. Look how she twisted things. ‘Sell your condo,’ she says. Easy for her to say. She has everything.”

“So what are you suggesting?”

A pause.

Kiana held her breath.

“I was thinking maybe you can get the PIN for her card,” Ms. Sterling said. “You have access to her purse, right? Check it. The card is in there. Then I’ll withdraw the money quickly tonight before she even notices. And in the morning, we’ll say the card was stolen on the bus or at the grocery store, for example.”

Silence so thick that Kiana could hear her own heart beating.

“Are you serious?” Darius’s voice was tense, but not indignant—more like intrigued.

“Absolutely. Listen, she won’t even notice right away. It’s not like she keeps tabs on it. She’s got over a hundred and twenty thousand. What’s the big deal if we take some? We’ll split it later. Half for you, half for me. That’s fair, right?”

Another pause.

“I don’t know, Mom. That’s risky.”

“Risky? What risk? She won’t even figure it out. And if she does, so what? You’ll say you didn’t know anything. A hacker compromised the account. That happens all the time.”

“What if she calls the bank?”

“So what? The bank will shrug. Security failure. But the card was on her. No one but her knew the PIN. She’ll blame herself for not being careful. Trust me, it’ll be fine.”

Kiana slowly closed the door.

Everything inside had frozen solid.

She wasn’t surprised.

For some reason, she wasn’t surprised at all.

She knew Ms. Sterling was capable of a lot, but for Darius to support it—that was a punch.

Not a hard one, but precise.