He Split Their Money. Her Labeled Receipts Exposed Everything-Tep

“Babe, starting this paycheck, we’re each handling our own money separately. I’m tired of supporting you.”

Diego said it in the kitchen with the confidence of a man who had rehearsed the sentence in the car.

I was chopping cilantro for dinner.

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The knife hit the cutting board in small, clean taps.

The refrigerator hummed behind him.

The late Texas heat pressed against the window above the sink, and the whole kitchen smelled like lime, onion, and meat simmering low on the stove.

For three seconds, I let him hear only the chopping.

I didn’t yell.

I didn’t cry.

I didn’t ask him to explain himself, because men like Diego usually explain only after they realize the room has stopped admiring them.

“That sounds excellent,” I said.

He blinked.

“Excellent?”

“Yes,” I said. “Separate finances are modern, fair, and very clear. We’ll start tomorrow.”

His mouth stayed open just long enough for me to know I had ruined the scene he had planned.

He wanted me hurt.

He wanted me defensive.

He wanted to stand in our kitchen and deliver a financial boundary like he was finally taking charge of a household he had never actually carried.

Instead, I smiled and went back to the cilantro.

Diego was an architect for a construction firm in Austin.

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