Bride Beaten At 3am After Refusing To Sign Over Her £1.8m Flat-Teptep

At 3:00 in the morning, my daughter came back from her wedding looking like someone had tried to bury her before sunrise.

The knock was so light that, for a second, I thought I had imagined it.

The flat was quiet in that strange way places become quiet after midnight, when even the fridge hum sounds too loud and every small noise feels like it belongs to someone else.

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I had not properly gone to bed.

No mother sleeps well on the night her only daughter gets married.

I was still wearing the old dressing gown Sofia always teased me about, sitting at the kitchen table with a mug of tea that had gone cold hours before.

Her bouquet ribbon was still in my handbag.

A spare safety pin from her dress was still beside the sink.

The kettle had clicked off and cooled, but I had not moved.

Then the knock came again.

Three thin taps against the door.

Not loud enough for anger.

Not steady enough for confidence.

I remember thinking it might be a neighbour who had locked herself out, or somebody pressing the wrong bell after too much champagne.

I walked down the narrow hallway, past the coats on the hook and the shoes Sofia had kicked off earlier that afternoon before stepping into her wedding heels.

When I opened the door, the world I had spent twenty-seven years building around my daughter broke in half.

Sofia stood on the threshold.

My Sofia.

My child, who had left my flat that morning with her hair pinned softly at the back of her neck, her hands trembling from excitement, her face full of all the hope I had been too frightened to trust.

Now she looked as though she had been dragged out of a nightmare and placed at my door.

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