He Drained My Boutique Savings, But My Laptop Caught Every Keystroke-eirian

After I buried my parents, I built my boutique with every dollar they left me.

The money had come from grief, and that made me careful with it.

My parents had spent their lives running a small hardware store in Portland, and after the crash that took them both, the settlement and the sale of the store were all my sister Allison and I had left besides photographs and a porch swing nobody could sit on without crying.

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I used my share to open a boutique on a quiet street where women came in looking tired and left standing a little taller.

Allison married Kyle.

That was how I learned that money can build a door, but loneliness can hand someone else the key.

Kyle arrived loud, charming, and already convinced the world owed him applause.

At first I told myself my sister would see it.

Then I started watching her watch him before she answered simple questions.

When Uncle Robert invited us all to the lakehouse, I wanted to believe a weekend could soften what marriage had tightened around her.

I drove out with groceries, sweaters, invoices for the boutique, and the quiet hope that I might get Allison alone.

Inside, Kyle was already laughing too loudly.

He had one hand wrapped around a glass and the other resting on the back of Allison’s chair like a claim.

Emma hugged me near the entryway and whispered, “Just keep your eyes open.”

I thought she meant his mood.

I did not know she meant the whole house.

The first warning came that evening, in the guest room.

My laptop sat on the dresser where I had left it, but the screen was angled wrong.

The charging cord had been moved to the side port I never used.

The keyboard still held a faint warmth beneath my fingers.

I opened the browser history and found it wiped clean.

Not naturally empty.

Cleaned.

Six months earlier, after someone tried to breach my boutique’s payment system, I had paid for security software that did more than block logins.

It photographed whoever opened protected files.

It logged keystrokes.

It saved device information somewhere the thief could not erase from the machine.

I had forgotten about it the way people forget about a smoke alarm until the kitchen fills with heat.

That night, I checked the dashboard from my phone and saw one small frozen image waiting.

Kyle was sitting at my laptop.

His face was lit blue by the screen.

His hands were on my keyboard.

I did not open the rest.

Not yet.

I needed to know what he had done before he knew I had seen him.

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