I heard laughter from the kitchen.
My older brother, Jason, was sitting at the table with my parents, drinking beer from one of Dad’s glass mugs like they were celebrating something. My mother looked up first and smiled in a way that made my stomach tighten.
“Oh, you’re home,” she said casually.
“What is my suitcase doing by the door?”
Jason leaned back in his chair, smug and loose, a man already enjoying a victory. “Your work is finished,” he said. “We got what we wanted. Don’t look back at us now.”
I stared at him. “What are you talking about?”
Dad chuckled. Actually chuckled. “Don’t act confused.”
Then Jason pulled my ATM card from his pocket and tossed it onto the table.
For a second, I couldn’t breathe.
“You stole my card?”
“Borrowed,” he said. “And emptied the account.”
I lunged for the card, but he got there first, pinning it under his palm. “Relax. It’s family money anyway.”
“No, it isn’t.”
Mom laughed softly, like I was a child throwing a tantrum. “It was a good decision. You’ve been hoarding money while living under this roof.”
The room went cold around me. “How much did you take?”
Jason gave a lazy shrug. “Everything.”
I snatched my phone from my bag with shaking hands, opened the banking app, and felt the blood drain from my face. Savings: $0.43. Checking: $12.11. The transfer history showed cash withdrawals, one after another, from two ATMs across town. Then a wire transfer. He had drained nearly $38,000.
“That was my money for graduate school,” I whispered.
Jason stood up. He was taller than me, broader, and he knew it. “Not anymore.”
“Give it back.”
“No.”
Dad rose too, crossing his arms. “You’ve been staying here for almost two years. Bills, food, utilities. Your mother and I decided this balanced things out.”
“Balanced things out?” My voice cracked. “You never asked me for rent.”
Mom shrugged. “We shouldn’t have had to.”
I looked from one face to another and saw no shame. Not even discomfort. Only relief—relief that they had taken what they wanted and no longer had to pretend I mattered.
Jason grabbed the suitcase, opened the front door, and shoved it onto the porch. Cold March wind rushed in.
“You can go now,” he said. “And don’t come crawling back.”
My parents laughed behind him.
What they did not know—what none of them knew—was that the account Jason had emptied was not really mine to spend freely at all. Most of that money had been placed there under a court-controlled arrangement after my aunt’s death, and every withdrawal was tracked.
And by the time Jason kicked me out of that house, the bank’s fraud department had already started calling….To be continued in C0mments 👇👇
My brother stole my ATM card and withdrew all the money from my account. After empty my account,
Pages: 1 2