Still locked out of the account, I texted him.
“Hey, do you know why the joint account overdrafted?”
The reply came almost immediately.
“Yarn. Seriously, Amy. All that yarn you’ve been ordering? Your crochet obsession is draining us.”
I blinked.
Yarn?
He blamed yarn?
I’ve crocheted since I was twelve. It’s not a passing phase. It’s the thing that kept me sane during Mom’s chemo, during job layoffs, during life’s endless curveballs. And yes, I’ve been ramping up inventory for my first craft fair, but every skein, every hook, every spool of overpriced eco-label string came from my personal account. I budget. I save. I document. Meticulously.
Jake knew that.
But he still tossed the blame like it was lint he could flick off his shirt. Like my creative joy was a frivolous, self-indulgent hobby instead of the quiet heartbeat of my everyday life.
That night, while he snored on the couch—face slack, belly full of pasta I made—I picked up his phone. He never changed his passcode. Never thought I’d snoop. And honestly, I hadn’t planned to.
Until now.
His banking app was still logged in.
My fingers hovered. Then tapped.
And just like that, I found where our money had gone.
There it was. Line after glowing line of betrayal.
Bridal Gown Boutique: $2,850
Floral Designs: $1,200
Spa Packages: $300
Bridal Shower Décor: $235
Custom Calligraphy Deposit: $500
At first, I thought maybe he helped his sister with a gift. Or fronted a cost she’d pay back. I wanted—desperately—to believe the best in him.
Then I saw it.
Authorized User: Kelsey S.
Jake added his sister to our account. Gave her our debit card. And let her throw a wedding on our dime.
Without telling me.
I didn’t cry. I didn’t rage. I made a list.
Two weekends later, I showed up to Kelsey’s bridal shower with a smile and a manila folder.
I sat through gift games and bite-sized mimosas, listened to toasts about love and new beginnings. I sipped, I nodded, I waited.
Then, as Kelsey clinked her glass and thanked everyone for making her dream come true, I stood.
“Since we’re celebrating the team effort behind this magical day, I just wanted to acknowledge the unexpected co-sponsor of this wedding,” I said, voice steady.
I held up the folder.
“This,” I said, “is our joint checking account. And every one of you should know that Jake—my husband—added Kelsey as an authorized user. Without telling me. So while I’ve been blamed for buying yarn, they’ve been draining our finances for floral arches and calligraphy menus.”
Silence swallowed the room. Someone dropped a fork.
Jake turned gray. Kelsey froze, her champagne flute trembling.
I wasn’t done.
“Next time,” I added, “just put cash on the registry.”
Then I sat back down and finished my mimosa.
Jake didn’t speak to me for two days. Then on day three, he finally muttered something about “helping his sister.”
He never apologized for lying. Just for getting caught.
We started couples therapy. Not because I forgave him, but because I needed to understand what he thought marriage was.
I don’t know where we’re headed, Jake and I. We’re trying. But the truth is, something broke. Not shattered. Not explosive. Just… quietly cracked.
The kind of crack that hums beneath your conversations. That reminds you trust doesn’t bounce back like a payment. It rebuilds slowly, if it rebuilds at all.
And me?
I still crochet. Every evening. My latest piece is a blanket—stormy greys, deep reds, dense and sturdy. Not delicate. Not for sale. Not for show.
Jake once asked who it was for.
I didn’t look up.
“Me,” I said.
And for once, he didn’t try to argue.
Because he knew.
This time, I wasn’t stitching for forgiveness.
This time, I was stitching armor.