Landlord Kept Her Deposit, Then State Investigators Found His Pattern-lequyen994 - Chainityai

Landlord Kept Her Deposit, Then State Investigators Found His Pattern-lequyen994

The first thing Marcus Webb got wrong about me was that I was too tired to fight.

To be fair, I looked tired. I was thirty-one, newly out of a long relationship, and trying to build a clean, quiet life around a promotion that demanded more of me than I admitted. When I found the two-bedroom at Aldermore Court, I called six minutes after the listing went live. Marcus answered like a man who had never missed a Little League practice, all warmth and steady confidence.

He told me the unit had just been renovated. He told me he did not tolerate nonsense from either side. He told me his tenants stayed for years because he treated people right. He used the word family three times before I even saw the kitchen.

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I should have heard the warning in that.

I paid first month’s rent, last month’s rent, and the security deposit with certified checks. I moved in on a Saturday with my friend Priya helping me carry boxes while her boyfriend assembled a bed frame on the floor. We ate Thai food out of cartons and I remember thinking, this place is going to be fine.

For a while, it almost was. The appliances worked. The parking space was mine. The windows sealed properly. When a loose cabinet hinge started sagging, I fixed it myself because it was easier than waiting.

Then a water stain appeared on my bedroom ceiling.

Marcus answered my first message three days later with, “Looking into it.” Two weeks after that, he said it was not structural. The drywall patch and paint went on his list. The stain stayed there for fourteen months.

The pattern became visible slowly, the way mold becomes visible only after it has already been growing. Dolores Hutchins, the retired teacher downstairs, mentioned her bathroom exhaust fan had been broken since the previous winter. Tomas and Brianna Escobar found mold behind their bathroom vanity and sent written requests for remediation. Marcus called it surface mold and stopped replying.

In February, my heat went out during an eleven-degree night. I called the emergency line listed in my lease and got a full voicemail box. I emailed. I texted. I filmed the thermostat reading fifty-one degrees and the tiny ghost of my breath in my own kitchen.

Marcus called the next morning at 9:17.

“You’ve got space heaters, right?” he said. “That’s what they’re for.”

I wrote the sentence down exactly. Then I mailed a formal complaint by certified mail and saved the return receipt.

That habit saved me.

When my lease ended, I gave notice in writing and scheduled the walkthrough. Marcus walked the unit with a clipboard, made approving sounds, and said it was in good shape. I asked him to sign the walkthrough form I had prepared. He looked at it like it might bite him and said he would send the deposit itemization within the statutory period.

In my state, the landlord had thirty days to return a deposit or provide itemized deductions.

Day thirty-one came.

Nothing.

I sent a demand letter by email and certified mail. I quoted the landlord-tenant statute. I gave him my forwarding address again. I asked for the deposit or a lawful itemization.

On day forty-five, Marcus sent one paragraph. No photos. No receipts. No itemized list. Just a note saying the deposit had been applied to cleaning, painting, and general wear-and-tear restoration. After that, he said, there was nothing left.

I called him.

“Marcus, I need the receipts for the deductions.”

He laughed. It was not nervous. It was bored.

“Honey, I have been doing this for twenty-two years,” he said. “Judges around here know me.”

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