Ryan believed the house money had been deposited into our joint account.

It hadn’t.

At closing, I had insisted on depositing the proceeds into a separate account that only I controlled. Ryan used to mock it and call it my “paranoid account.”

The account had two-factor security tied to my phone.

Ryan didn’t know that.

What he did know was the routing number. He had seen it on a statement once. That was enough for him to try something reckless.

As soon as the money arrived, he attempted to transfer it into a brand-new online account he had opened.

But there was one detail he hadn’t expected.

Before surgery, I had placed a temporary transfer restriction on the account while I was hospitalized. Any outgoing transfer above $5,000 required a confirmation call.

To me.

When the bank’s fraud department called, I answered immediately.

“I’m currently in the hospital,” I explained calmly. “And I did not authorize any transfers.”

Within minutes, the bank blocked the transaction, reversed the attempt, and froze the receiving account Ryan had created.

His repeated login attempts triggered even more security alerts.