Mother Rented A Ruined House To Test My Boyfriend’s Love-Teptep

When I first brought my boyfriend home to meet my parents, my mother immediately rented a cramped, dilapidated house to feign poverty.

She said it was necessary.

“These days, there are gold-diggers everywhere. You are the only daughter of the CEO of Tengfei Group, your net worth is in the hundreds of millions. How could you not be careful?”

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My mother said it while standing in the doorway of a house she did not own, holding a bunch of cheap keys between two fingers as if they were medical instruments.

The place was narrow, damp, and faintly sour from old carpet and closed windows.

Rain had been falling all afternoon, the kind of thin grey drizzle that makes pavements shine and coats smell wet even after you hang them up.

Inside, there was a tiny kitchen with a kettle that took too long to boil, a tea towel faded almost white, and a table so small that three mugs made it look crowded.

My mother looked perfectly at home in it.

That was what made it alarming.

In real life, she never tolerated peeling paint, bad plumbing, or curtains that did not match.

In real life, she had people who opened doors before she reached them.

But whenever I brought someone home, she became an actress.

She would put on a plain cardigan, remove her jewellery, and pour tea in chipped cups as if she had spent half her life counting coins in a biscuit tin.

It was embarrassing.

It was also effective.

Men changed when they thought there was nothing to gain.

I had seen it happen more than once.

One man, who had spent weeks telling me he admired my “simple heart”, went quiet the moment he saw the rented house.

He glanced at the damp patch near the ceiling, then at my shoes, as if recalculating my value from top to bottom.

Another became painfully polite, which was worse.

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