Her Mother Hid the Condo Deed Before the Wedding. Then the Toast Began-mdue - Chainityai

Her Mother Hid the Condo Deed Before the Wedding. Then the Toast Began-mdue

Before I got married, my mother made me do something I thought would ruin the trust in my marriage before it even began.

She made me transfer my $5 million Manhattan condo into her name.

Then she told me not to say a word to Mark or his family.

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At the time, I thought she was being paranoid.

Three months before the wedding, she called me into her bedroom and locked the door behind me.

That was the first thing that made my stomach tighten.

My mother was not a dramatic woman.

She did not slam doors.

She did not whisper like people in movies.

She did not turn family conversations into emergencies unless something had already gone wrong.

The room smelled like lavender detergent, old paper, and the black coffee she always carried from room to room and never finished.

Late afternoon light came through the blinds and striped the carpet at our feet.

Somewhere below her apartment, a truck backed up with a steady beeping sound that made every second feel counted.

She sat on the edge of the bed and said, “Sophie, next week, you are transferring the deed to your condo into my name.”

I stared at her.

Then I laughed once.

Not because it was funny.

Because my mind needed a second to reject what it had just heard.

“Mom, no.”

She did not blink.

“Yes.”

The condo was not a casual asset to me.

It was not a cute place my parents had bought so I could cosplay as an adult in New York.

It was years of work in physical form.

It was eighty-hour weeks, dinners at my desk, missed birthdays, bonuses I never spent, vacations I canceled because I could not afford to disappear during a crucial quarter.

It was also my parents helping me when the opportunity came.

I never denied that.

They had helped with the down payment when I found the Tribeca loft.

It had floor-to-ceiling windows, a private elevator, wide hardwood floors, and a doorman named Paul who knew every package before you asked for it.

It was worth more than $5 million.

It was where Mark and I were supposed to start our married life.

I had already pictured him making coffee at the kitchen island.

I had pictured myself walking barefoot across those floors on a Sunday morning.

I had even pictured, quietly and embarrassingly, a baby crawling through the sunlight by the windows.

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