The Forged Deed That Turned an Arranged Marriage Into Revenge-heyily

At 8:12 a.m. on a gray Thursday in January, Aunt Jessica’s house smelled like wet carpet, old coffee, and the damp closet where she kept everything that used to belong to my mother.

The cracked mirror over the dresser split my face into pieces while I tried to smooth the borrowed white dress with hands that would not stop shaking.

Outside, frost clung to the porch rail.

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The little mailbox flag tapped in the wind like someone knocking from far away.

‘From today on, you are no longer a daughter of this house, Emily,’ Aunt Jessica said.

She stood in the doorway in her brown sweater, hair pinned too tight, eyes already finished with me.

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

I was eighteen years old.

My father died when I was little, and my mother got sick years later.

When she passed, Aunt Jessica took the house keys, the folders, the checkbook, the insurance mail, and me.

She said she was raising me out of charity.

That morning, I learned charity can be priced, itemized, folded into an envelope, and slid across a kitchen table.

The man waiting downstairs was named Michael.

He was thirty-seven, sun-browned from work, with a grief in his eyes that looked older than his face.

His wife, Sarah, had died two years earlier.

She had left him with three children: Ethan, nine; Noah, six; and Emma, four.

The children were not there that morning.

Only Michael was.

He stood near the kitchen table with his cap in both hands, like he had walked into the wrong room and did not know how to leave without making it worse.

Aunt Jessica poured coffee without offering me any.

‘She’s quiet, hardworking, and won’t cause you trouble,’ she told him.

Her voice was smooth and practical.

Like she was selling a used appliance.

‘She can cook, clean, do laundry, watch kids.’

Michael’s jaw tightened.

He did not look proud.

He did not look happy either.

He set a thick envelope and a grocery bag full of folded papers on the table beside a packet marked MARRIAGE LICENSE.

I remember the smell of the coffee turning bitter on the warmer.

I remember the refrigerator humming.

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