She said she could no longer stay in a house where trust had been broken, and that the inheritance was never just money but a promise from her father that I had no right to touch.
I realized in that moment that she was not reacting to money but to betrayal, and I sat down beside her, finally admitting the truth without excuses for the first time.
We spent hours talking through everything I had done, and I promised her that I would repay every cent, not as a financial obligation but as a way to prove I understood the weight of what I had taken.
In the weeks that followed, we began rebuilding slowly, cutting expenses, working extra hours, and making each repayment feel like an act of accountability rather than arithmetic.
Lily did not forgive me quickly, but she stayed, and little by little the silence between us softened into conversations, then cautious smiles, then moments that felt almost like before.
Now I understand that I did not nearly lose her because of money, but because I forgot that trust is something you can only protect, never borrow.