My name is Audrey Collins. I went home on my lunch break because something didn’t sit right with me.
For three days, my husband, Gavin Prescott, had claimed he was too sick to work—coughing weakly under a gray blanket while I rushed back to my job at Riverside Medical Center feeling guilty for leaving him alone. That afternoon, I bought chicken soup and ginger ale, determined to prove I was still being a supportive wife.
I parked down the street so the garage wouldn’t alert him and slipped inside quietly.
I expected coughing.
Instead, I heard Gavin’s voice—steady, controlled, completely healthy.
“I told you the timeline,” he said. “She can’t suspect anything before Friday.”
A woman’s voice answered sharply through the speaker.
“Then stop stalling. You promised the deed and the confirmation.”
My pulse slammed in my ears. I edged closer and saw him pacing, upright and strong, sunlight on his face, no sign of illness.
“I’ve already moved the money,” he said calmly. “Let me handle the rest.”
Money. Deed. Friday.
“She’s here,” he muttered suddenly. “I have to go.”
I stepped into the kitchen and called out evenly, “Hi, I came home for a minute.”
Seconds later, he appeared wrapped in the blanket, coughing theatrically.
“What are you doing here?” he asked with a strained smile.
“I brought soup,” I said, watching him carefully.
When I asked who he’d been speaking to, he replied, “Work stuff,” without meeting my eyes.
A few minutes later, my phone buzzed with an email: Midwest Federal Bank – Account Change Confirmation.
I had never set up those alerts.
At the bank, an employee informed me that a new phone number had been added to our account that morning. Mail notifications were redirected to an address tied to someone named Jordan Russell. There was also a pending request to remove me as a joint account holder.
I immediately froze the account and required in-person verification for any changes.
Then I called my friend Holly, a paralegal, and told her everything.
“Check the property records today,” she advised.
At the county recorder’s office, we found a quitclaim deed scheduled for filing on Friday—transferring Gavin’s share of our home to an entity called Russell Asset Group LLC. Gavin was listed as the registered agent.
The LLC had been formed two months earlier.
This wasn’t impulsive. It was planned.
That night, I acted normal while observing him. He only coughed when I walked into the room.
The next morning he casually mentioned, “You may need to sign refinancing papers Friday.”
“Of course,” I replied—already scheduled to meet a real estate attorney.
On Thursday, my lawyer helped me file a Notice of Marital Interest, preventing any unilateral transfer of the house.
Friday morning, Gavin dressed sharply—nothing like a sick man.
“I’m going to the county office,” he said.
“I’m coming,” I answered.
At the clerk’s desk, he slid the deed forward confidently.
The clerk paused. “There’s a Notice of Marital Interest on file. This requires review.”
Gavin turned to me, anger barely contained.
“What did you do?”
“I protected myself.”
In the supervisor’s office, he called it “routine financial planning.” When asked if I consented, I said firmly, “No.”
He claimed my signature was included.
“If my signature appears, it’s forged,” I replied, placing printed bank alerts and LLC documents on the desk.
The transfer was halted.
Moments later, his phone rang. I heard a woman say, “I’m downstairs. Tell me it’s done.”
A tall woman in a black coat stood near the entrance, watching. She approached, irritation flashing across her face.
“I’m his wife,” I said before Gavin could speak.
She turned to him sharply. “You put my email on her bank account?”
He had no answer.
Security intervened as voices rose. Her name was Jordan Russell.
She left furious.
I told Gavin, calmly, “We’ll speak through lawyers.”
That afternoon, I met with a family law attorney who filed for emergency temporary orders granting me exclusive occupancy and restricting financial transfers.
That night, a judge approved the order.
The next morning, I returned home with a sheriff and locksmith. Gavin opened the door furious.
“This is insane,” he said.
The sheriff handed him the court order. He tried to convince me I’d misunderstood.
“You drafted a deed and redirected bank alerts without my consent,” I replied evenly. “I’m responding to documented actions.”
The locksmith changed the locks as Gavin packed his things.
“This isn’t over,” he muttered.
“Your Friday plan is,” I answered quietly.
When he drove away, the house finally felt still.
My phone buzzed—confirmation that our bank account was locked and flagged for dual verification.
I stood in the living room, staring at the folded gray blanket.
The performance was over.
I didn’t feel victorious.
But I felt steady.
And steady was enough to begin again.
