My Husband Tried To Tow Away My Mother’s Car In My Name — Then Security Said Another Woman’s Name-thuyhien

The tow truck kept backing down the ramp behind us, each warning beep bouncing off the concrete and striking my spine like a metronome. Rainwater dripped from a pipe overhead and dotted the hood in dark circles. Dominic’s mouth opened, closed, then tightened at one corner.

‘Clerical error,’ he said.

The guard did not nod. His flashlight stayed on the open driver’s door. ‘Step away from the vehicle, sir.’

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Dominic did not move.

That was when I slid past him and opened the glove box.

Cold registration papers brushed my wrist. An insurance card. The old packet of tissues my mother used to keep for church. And underneath them, tucked inside a cream envelope with a fresh notary stamp, sat a title transfer application with my full name printed across the top and a signature that looked like mine from across the room and nothing like mine from six inches away.

Recipient: Lila Mercer.

The paper shook once between my fingers. Not because my hand had lost strength. Because Dominic saw it.

He reached for the envelope.

The guard stepped between us so quickly his utility belt knocked against the sedan.

‘Hands where I can see them.’

Dominic gave a dry, practiced laugh, the kind he used at charity dinners when someone else made a mistake with the seating chart.

‘My wife is upset. This is a private matter.’

‘Forgery isn’t private,’ the guard said.

The tow truck stopped fifteen feet away. Orange light washed over Dominic’s coat, the wet concrete, the smashed bakery box on the ground with yellow lemon filling leaking out of one corner. The sweet smell had turned dense now, almost rotten in the cold air.

At 9:21 p.m., the guard asked us both to walk to the security office. Dominic kept close enough for his sleeve to brush mine. He did not look at me.

‘Say nothing until we get this straight,’ he murmured.

The metal of the keys pressed crescents into my palm.

‘You already said enough,’ I told him.

Inside the security office, the fluorescent lights flattened everyone’s face. A vending machine hummed near the back wall. Wet footprints marked the tile from the front door to the desk. The guard called his supervisor, then the number attached to the fraud hold. Melissa Greene answered on the second ring.

Her voice came through the speaker crisp as cut glass.

‘Do not release that vehicle. I filed the hold at 8:56 p.m. after my client forwarded me the attempted transfer paperwork. The receiving party is linked to an active asset-shielding complaint.’

Dominic’s head turned toward the phone in small increments.

‘Melissa,’ he said, smoothing his cuff with thumb and forefinger, ‘this is unnecessary.’

‘No,’ she replied. ‘Forgery is unnecessary.’

His phone lit up on the desk where the guard had placed it. LILA flashed across the screen.

Nobody in the room spoke for one beat.

Then I picked it up.

Dominic’s hand shot forward. The guard blocked him again.

I answered.

A woman’s voice came through quickly, low and impatient. ‘Did the tow driver already leave? We need it tonight, Dominic. I’m not signing that lease with nothing in the garage.’

The office went still except for the vending machine fan.

I looked at him.

Color left his face in layers.

The call ended by itself.

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