They Tied Her Up For Refusing To Sign Away A £50-Million Flat-heuh

They tied her under the blazing sun for three days because she refused to give away a £50-million flat.

“Sign it or we’ll let you die,” her mother-in-law said, not knowing who she really was.

By the third afternoon, Gwen had stopped measuring time by clocks.

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She measured it by shade.

The oak tree gave her a strip of relief in the early morning, then abandoned her before noon.

The grass underneath her shoes was dry and flattened where her feet had dragged.

Her wrists burned against the rope whenever she shifted, and she had learned not to shift unless the pain in her shoulders became worse than the pain in her skin.

The house behind her was too clean for what was happening in its garden.

Cream stone patio.

Trimmed hedge.

Polished glass doors.

A kitchen where the kettle had clicked off twice that morning and nobody had bothered to pour Gwen a cup of water.

Mrs Hilary sat under a wide umbrella as though she were hosting lunch.

Her linen trousers were pressed.

Her sunglasses rested on top of her head.

Beside her glass of iced tea lay a silver pen, a brown folder, and the transfer papers Gwen had refused to sign.

“Sign it, Gwen,” Hilary said, with the cold patience of someone who had never been told no. “Sign it now, or you can stay outside another day.”

Gwen’s mouth was so dry her tongue felt too large.

She looked at the pen.

Then at Edward.

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