I was horrified by what I heard when I overheard my husband and his mother talking a few weeks after the wedding.
Anna had thought that her union with Richard was the beginning of a real fairy tale, full of joy and brightness. She saw their fortuitous encounter at a charming café outside of York, the hectic four months before his proposal, and the wedding in delicate pink and gold as a dream come true. Mrs. Elizabeth, her mother, was unable to contain her excitement for Richard, referring to him as the “ideal son-in-law.” However, this illusion was broken like brittle glass by the force of fate after the family got together to celebrate the yearly harvest festival.
After dinner, Anna went upstairs to grab a box of family mementos—old letters and photographs. As she descended the creaky staircase of the old house, she halted: muffled voices were emanating from the living room. Richard was speaking, and each word pierced her heart like a sharp blade:
“I would never have married her if it weren’t for your money, Mrs. Elizabeth.”
Anna’s breath caught, and her legs buckled. Her mother responded softly but firmly:
“Be quiet, Richard! She might hear you. Just endure it a little longer. Once her work situation stabilizes, you can leave. She’s too fragile to handle it on her own.”
Richard snorted, irritation apparent in his voice:
“Don’t forget that last payment by Christmas. I won’t stay without it.”
Anna barely made it to her room, clutching the banister to keep from collapsing. Her world was falling apart. Her mother had paid Richard to marry her. All his sweet words, care, and vows at the altar were lies, bought with filthy money. The pain overwhelmed her like an icy wave, but Anna resolved to discover the whole truth.
She searched through his belongings while he slept, finding evidence—bank statements with transfers from her mother labeled “expenses,” “down payment,” “final payment.” In his emails, there were messages about debts, overdue loans, desperate pleas to friends for money. Richard was drowning in a financial pit, and her mother was saving him at her daughter’s expense. Every look, every touch from him now made Anna shiver with disgust. Conversations with her mother became a torment—she wanted to scream, to purge the poison, but she remained silent, gathering strength. Questions tormented her soul: did her mother really believe she was undeserving of love? Was anything in this marriage real?
Anna decided their betrayal wouldn’t stay hidden. On Christmas, when the family gathered around the large table at her mother’s house, she made her move. Under the Christmas tree lay a small box, tied with a red ribbon.
“This is for you, Mum. You’ve earned it,” Anna said, looking her in the eye.
Mrs. Elizabeth opened the box with a smile, turning pale at the sight. Inside were printed copies of the bank transfers—irrefutable evidence.
“What does this mean?” she whispered, her voice trembling.
“It proves that you bought me a husband,” Anna spoke calmly, though a storm raged inside her.
Silence descended like the calm before a storm. Richard dropped his spoon, which clattered onto the plate.
“Anna, I can explain…” he began, but his voice was pitiful, like a cornered animal.
“No need. You’ve received your money. This marriage is over.”
Her mother burst into tears, collapsing into a chair:
“I did it for you! You’re ill, weak! I didn’t want you to be alone!”
“No, you did it to control me,” Anna’s voice trembled with pain. “Congratulations, Mum. You bought me a husband and lost a daughter.”
She left the house, leaving them in utter silence. The cold wind lashed at her face, but her tears had dried. At the beginning of the year, Anna filed for divorce. Richard didn’t resist—the masks were off, and he had nothing left to stand on. Her mother called, begging for forgiveness, but each call felt like an echo of betrayal, causing Anna to tremble. The stress took a toll on her health—her heart raced, her hands shook, but friends and long hours with a therapist helped her rise from this hell.
Now she is free. For the first time in a long while, Anna breathes deeply, unshackled by lies and chains. This freedom is more precious than any wealth in the world. She looks towards a future without Richard or her mother’s machinations and realizes: she has endured. How would you have acted in her place? Could you withstand such a blow and find the strength to carry on?