“It’ll just be temporary,” he insisted. “Mom will pay you back next month. You won’t even accrue much interest.
You’re not really borrowing it—it’s just a pass-through.”
“I don’t know…” I said quietly, shutting the dishwasher. Truthfully, I didn’t want to loan Susan a cent—especially when I didn’t even know what it was for. But Andrew pressed harder, using that authoritative tone that meant the discussion was over.
“This is for my family,” he said. “For us.”
And just like always, I caved. I ignored the sinking feeling in my gut, the one that had warned me for years.
I’d ignored it for most of our marriage—why stop now? The day the loan was approved, I withdrew the entire $15,000 in cash from the bank. Andrew insisted on cash, which should’ve been a giant red flag.
But again, I pushed down my doubts. The teller counted the stack twice, raising an eyebrow. I folded the receipt, tucked the envelope into my purse, and drove home with trembling hands.
When Andrew came through the door that evening, the first thing he said was, “Did you get the money?”
I walked over to the bookcase where I’d hidden the envelope. I stood there for a moment, staring at it. It felt strangely heavy in my hands.
A text notification on my phone snapped me out of my daze. “What’s the holdup?” Andrew asked from behind me, annoyed. I turned, holding out the envelope.
“Here’s the fifteen grand—from the loan.”
He took it without so much as a thank you. “I’ll drop it off at Mom’s tonight.”
That was it. No hug.
No kiss. No appreciation. The following month was a nightmare.
Every time I got a bank alert, my heart would race. As the repayment due date crept closer, neither Andrew nor Susan said a single word about the money. I couldn’t take it anymore.
I finally texted her: “Hi! Just following up about the repayment for the loan. Let me know what works best.”
Her reply came back instantly:
“I don’t know what you’re talking about.
I never borrowed any money from you. And I’m not paying anything back.”
I sat in stunned silence, staring at her message. Then I marched into the kitchen, where Andrew sat eating a bowl of cereal.
I held out my phone and said, “Look at what your mother just sent me.”
He barely glanced at it before shrugging. “I don’t think she ever planned on paying you back.”
My stomach flipped. “Excuse me?
You told me she’d repay me in a month!”
“I didn’t have a choice. She threatened to cut me off.”
“Cut you off from what?”
“Her will. Her house.
Everything.” He said it like I was the unreasonable one. “You don’t understand what she’s done for me.”
Not us. Me.
“What exactly did she use that money for?” I demanded. He looked toward the door. “Don’t you dare,” I said, stepping in front of him.
“Tell me the truth.”
And then he told me. Susan had used my loan to fly to Turkey, where she got a full facelift and breast implants. “You used my credit to pay for your mother’s cosmetic surgery?” I snapped.
“She’s dating again,” he said, as though that justified anything. The money had also gone to designer clothes and a professional photoshoot. While I was panicking over debt, she was posting filtered selfies with hashtags like #Ageless and #HotGirlSummer—funded by me.
I collapsed into a chair, covering my face. “On the plus side,” Andrew said, “making those payments will boost your credit score.”
I didn’t even respond. I couldn’t believe how deeply they’d betrayed me.
And worse than that—I felt like a fool. But I didn’t just sit there and cry. I kept making the loan payments, yes—it was my name on the paperwork.
But I also called a lawyer. See, I hadn’t completely ignored my instincts that day. When I handed Andrew the envelope, I’d placed my phone on the bookshelf and hit record.
The video clearly showed him taking the envelope and saying, “I’ll take it to Mom tonight.”
When I showed the footage, the repayment receipts, and Susan’s denial message to my lawyer, her eyes lit up. She also started looking into the house Andrew claimed his mom was dangling over his head. Turns out—it wasn’t even legally hers.
The house was still in her deceased husband’s name. There had never been a title transfer or will update. Andrew stood to inherit everything with or without her blessing.
The whole “cut-off” threat? Nothing but manipulation. So I finally did what I should have done long ago.
I filed for divorce—and full custody. I was not about to let my daughter grow up thinking this toxic family dynamic was normal. We also filed fraud charges.
Andrew had tricked me into a loan under false pretenses, and we had the evidence to prove it. He tried to deny it all—claimed he gave the money back to his mom—but it was too late. He was trapped.
And honestly? I wasn’t sorry. While Andrew flailed, I focused on rebuilding a life for myself and my daughter.
It wasn’t easy—but it was freeing. One morning, curiosity got the best of me. I checked Susan’s Instagram.
Blocked. Apparently, lawsuits aren’t part of #HotGirlSummer.