Before My Wedding, My Lawyer Sister Warned Me About The £9.2 Million Dowry-Teptep

The night before my wedding, my older sister—a lawyer with over twelve years of experience—held my hand so tightly that her knuckles turned white.

“Wan Qing, listen to me. The entire £9.2 million dowry must be put into a family trust. The beneficiary must be your name, absolutely not Chen Haoyu’s.”

For a moment, I thought I had misheard her.

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The kitchen was warm from the kettle, and the window above the sink had misted over from the steam.

Outside, fine rain tapped against the glass, soft and ordinary, as if the world had no idea my sister had just placed a warning in front of me like a blade.

I looked at her and forced a laugh.

“But Haoyu isn’t that kind of person.”

She did not laugh with me.

She only gave that weary smile I had seen on her face after difficult phone calls, after court days, after meetings with women who arrived with folders and left with red eyes.

“He might not be,” she said. “But his mother certainly is.”

I fell quiet.

The words should have sounded cruel.

Instead, they sounded practised.

My sister had worked in law for more than twelve years, and she had seen too many marriages begin with flowers and end with empty bank accounts.

She told me about women who had been adored before the wedding, photographed and praised and called lucky, only to discover afterwards that every penny they brought in had become “family money”.

Family money, somehow, always meant money controlled by the husband’s side.

Some of them had signed things they did not understand.

Some had transferred funds out of embarrassment.

Some had been told that refusing was selfish, cold, disrespectful, proof they were not committed to the marriage.

By the time they came to my sister, they had often already lost almost everything.

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