Her Mercedes Was Totaled by a Stranger. Then the Police Report Exposed Her Marriage-olive

The first thing Simone Patterson saw when she came home was police light flashing across her garage door.

Red, blue, red, blue.

It jumped across the wet paint in sharp bursts, too bright for the gray Tuesday afternoon and too wrong for the quiet suburban street where nothing usually happened except school buses, barking dogs, and neighbors dragging trash cans back from the curb.

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Her suitcase wheels scraped over the rain-slick driveway behind her.

One wheel caught in the little crack near the garage, the same crack Trevor kept saying he would patch when work slowed down.

Work never slowed down.

Trevor never patched it.

The small American flag on their porch post snapped in the damp wind, and the mailbox at the curb was stuffed with two days of flyers.

Simone had come home early from Seattle with a tired shoulder, a dead laptop battery, and one quiet wish.

She wanted her own kitchen.

She wanted dry socks.

She wanted to stand in a room that did not require a hotel key card or a polite business smile.

Most of all, she wanted one evening where she did not have to pretend her marriage still felt like a safe place.

Then she saw the empty garage.

Her silver Mercedes was gone.

For one strange second, her brain tried to make sense of it in ordinary ways.

Maybe Trevor had moved it.

Maybe the garage door had malfunctioned.

Maybe she was too tired from the flight and the rideshare from the airport to understand what she was seeing.

But the garage was empty in a clean, undeniable way.

No silver hood.

No reflection of headlights.

No familiar shape beside the storage shelves and the folded lawn chairs.

Just a dark oil stain that belonged to Trevor’s older SUV and the empty space where the only thing in that driveway that was fully hers should have been.

She had bought that Mercedes herself.

Not with family money.

Not with Trevor’s bonus.

Not with anyone’s permission.

Three years of packed lunches, skipped vacations, delayed purchases, and careful payments had gone into that car.

She remembered the dealership finance manager speaking to Trevor first, as if Simone were only there to choose the color.

She remembered sliding her pay stubs across the desk and saying, calmly, “You can talk to me.”

She remembered the first time she drove it home, hands at ten and two like a teenager, while Trevor said it was “a little much” for someone who only needed to commute.

That had been the first warning.

Not because he disliked the car.

Because he disliked how proud she looked in it.

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