My Husband Gave My Mercedes to His Mistress… So When She Cr3shed It, I Reported It Missing and Took Action

The second thing I noticed was that my garage was empty.

The first thing I noticed was the police cruiser parked in my driveway. I had returned two days early from a business trip in Seattle because I missed my own bed, my quiet kitchen, and the version of my marriage I kept pretending still existed.

For months, something about Trevor had felt off, but I kept telling myself eight years of marriage deserved patience. He laughed less. Touched me less. Kept his phone turned facedown like it contained classified secrets. Still, I convinced myself that love meant trusting him through strange seasons, even when every instinct whispered that something was already gone.

Then I pulled my rental car into the driveway of our suburban home outside Charlotte, North Carolina, and saw a young officer standing near the front steps. Behind him, the garage door was wide open. My silver Mercedes was gone. Not just any car. My car. The one I had saved three years to buy.

The one with cream leather seats I chose myself after comparing samples at the dealership. The car I negotiated for alone because Trevor said I was too emotional to handle salesmen. I proved him wrong that day. I knocked four thousand dollars off the price and drove home feeling proud in a way I had not felt in years. It was the first expensive thing I had ever bought without apologizing. And now it was missing.

“Mrs. Patterson?” the officer asked as I stepped out with my suitcase still in hand.

“Yes,” I said, my throat tight. “What’s going on? Where is my car?”

The officer looked uncomfortable, as if he hated what he had to say.

“Ma’am, I need you to come inside. Your husband is waiting.”

Fear settled cold in my stomach. I followed him through my own front door and found Trevor on the living room couch, elbows on his knees, face in his hands. When he looked up, he was pale, shaking, and red-eyed.

“Trevor,” I said slowly. “Where is my car?”

He opened his mouth, but nothing came out. The officer cleared his throat.

“Mrs. Patterson, your vehicle was involved in a serious accident this morning. The driver had minor injuries, but the car is totaled. It’s currently at an impound lot.”

For a moment, all I could hear was the refrigerator humming.

“The driver?” I whispered. “I’ve been in Seattle all week. My car was supposed to be in the garage.”

Trevor looked down. The officer checked his notebook.

“The driver was Miss Candace Thompson. She told officers your husband gave her permission to use the vehicle.”

The room tilted beneath me.

“Permission,” I repeated. “From my husband. To drive my car?”

The officer nodded carefully.

“That’s what she stated.”

“My name is the only one on that registration,” I said, each word sharper than the last. “Trevor had no legal right to let anyone drive that car.”

The officer’s expression changed, turning professional and alert.

“I did not give Candace Thompson permission,” I continued. “I don’t even know who she is.”

But I did. Not her name, not until that moment. But I knew what she was. Trevor’s silence told me everything my heart had spent a year refusing to believe. The officer straightened.

“Thank you for confirming that, ma’am. That changes the case. You’ll need to come to the station and file a formal report. Miss Thompson may face charges for unauthorized use of a vehicle.”

Trevor finally spoke.

“Simone, please. Don’t.”

I turned toward him slowly. His voice cracked.

“I can explain.”

The officer handed me his card.

“I’ll give you both a moment. Mrs. Patterson, call me when you’re ready.”

When the door closed behind him, the house became painfully quiet. Not peaceful. Just quiet enough for the truth to stand between us.

“How long?” I asked.

Trevor pressed his hands together like a man praying inside a church he had already burned.

“Simone—”

“How long have you been with her?”

His face collapsed.

“Fourteen months.”

Fourteen months. More than a year. While I worked sixty-hour weeks at the marketing firm to help pay our mortgage. While I planned our anniversary trip and sat across from him at dinner asking if we should start trying for a baby soon. I laughed, but it did not sound like me.

“And you gave her my car.”

“She needed to get somewhere,” he said weakly. “I didn’t think you’d be home until Friday.”

“She needed my Mercedes?”

His silence answered. Something inside me went still. Not broken. Not hysterical. Still. Trevor had not only betrayed our marriage. He had handed another woman the keys to something I had built for myself, then expected me to swallow the damage quietly. But he forgot one thing. The car was in my name. The insurance was in my name. And the woman he let drive it had no permission from me.

So while Trevor begged me not to make things worse, I picked up the officer’s card and reached for my phone. Candace Thompson had totaled my Mercedes. But Trevor was about to learn I was done letting people wreck my life and walk away with the keys.