My Mother-In-Law Toasted To Stealing My Tribeca Home At My Wedding-thuyhien

The first time my mother told me to put my apartment in her name, I thought she had finally let fear get the better of her.

She was standing inside her own bedroom with the door locked, like we were about to discuss a crime instead of a wedding.

The air conditioner rattled in the window.

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A paper coffee cup sat untouched on her dresser, and the whole room smelled faintly of cold coffee, face powder, and the lavender sachets she kept in her drawers.

“Sophia,” she said, taking both my hands, “next week you are going to put your apartment in my name.”

I stared at her.

The sentence did not fit the room.

It did not fit my life.

It did not fit the wedding binder sitting open on her bed with fabric swatches and seating charts spread across the comforter.

“Mom,” I said, “why would I do that?”

She did not answer right away.

That was what scared me later.

Not the request itself, but the fact that she had already lived with the answer long enough to stop flinching at it.

The apartment in Tribeca was not just a place to sleep.

It was the first thing I had ever owned that made me feel like all those late nights had actually turned into something solid.

It had a park view if you leaned slightly from the living room window.

It had a private elevator that opened into a quiet little entryway where I kept a bowl for keys and a basket for mail.

It had building security so strict that Jared used to joke they knew our takeout order before we did.

The apartment was worth over two million dollars.

That number mattered.

Not because money was everything, but because some people only understand love after they have converted it into property.

I had worked for it.

My parents had helped me get over the final hill when the down payment and closing costs nearly broke my confidence.

Every inch of that place held a version of me that had said no to easier things.

No vacations when my friends went away.

No new car when mine kept making that grinding noise on cold mornings.

No spending money just because I was tired and wanted comfort.

That apartment was where Jared and I were supposed to start our married life.

I pictured Sunday mornings there.

I pictured bare feet on hardwood floors.

I pictured Jared making terrible coffee and laughing when I complained.

I pictured a baby running down the hall one day, slapping sticky hands against the walls while I pretended to be mad.

I had already cleared one drawer for Jared’s watches.

He had already left a navy suit in my closet.

There were signs of him everywhere, little polite invasions that had felt sweet at the time.

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