She Was Sent To Marry A Widower, Then A Forged Deed Surfaced-nga9999 - Chainityai

She Was Sent To Marry A Widower, Then A Forged Deed Surfaced-nga9999

At 8:12 that January morning, Emily stood in front of a cracked mirror and tried to make a borrowed white dress look like something a person chose.

The house smelled like damp carpet, old coffee, and the cedar closet where Aunt Jessica kept anything that used to belong to Emily’s mother.

Her hands shook so badly the zipper teeth scratched her thumb.

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Outside, frost glazed the porch steps, and a little American flag on the railing clicked softly every time the wind came through.

Aunt Jessica stood in the doorway with a folder against her chest, calm in the way people are calm when they have already decided your life for you.

“From today on, you are no longer a daughter of this house, Emily,” she said.

Emily watched her own face split in the mirror where the crack ran through the glass.

“You are the wife of a man who needs someone to take care of his children.”

Emily was eighteen, old enough for people to call her grown when it helped them and young enough to be treated like furniture when it did not.

Her father had died when she was little.

Her mother got sick years later, slowly at first, then all at once, until the kitchen calendar became a list of rides, pill bottles, folded bills, and forms Emily was too young to understand.

When her mother died, Aunt Jessica took the keys, the checkbook, the mail, the file box under the bed, and Emily.

She called it charity.

For almost two years, Emily believed her because needing somebody makes almost any explanation sound merciful.

“You should be grateful,” Aunt Jessica said whenever Emily asked about her mother’s papers.

Gratitude can become a leash when the person holding it knows you have nowhere else to go.

Michael arrived that morning in an old pickup with mud on the tires and work gloves on the dashboard.

He was thirty-seven, sun-darkened from work, with tired eyes and a wedding ring he still wore because taking it off would have meant admitting Sarah was gone.

Sarah had died two years earlier, leaving him with three children.

Ethan was nine, Noah was six, and Emma was four.

Michael placed a thick envelope beside a grocery bag full of papers and a packet marked MARRIAGE LICENSE.

Emily saw her name printed once near the top before Aunt Jessica turned the packet facedown.

“She’s quiet,” Aunt Jessica said. “She works hard, does what she’s told, and doesn’t make trouble.”

Michael’s jaw tightened, but he did not stop her.

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