Mum Hid My £5M Deed Before My Mother-In-Law Claimed My Home-heuh

Before I married Mark, my mum asked me to do something that made me question everything I thought I knew about her.

She told me to put my £5 million Manhattan flat in her name.

Not after the wedding.

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Not someday if things went wrong.

Next week.

She said it in her bedroom with the door locked, her voice lowered as if there were strangers listening from the landing.

“Sophie, you are going to transfer the deed to me,” she said.

I remember the rain tapping the window behind her.

I remember the kettle downstairs clicking off and nobody moving to pour the tea.

Mostly, I remember how cold her hands were when she took mine.

At first, I thought she had simply lost her nerve.

Weddings do that to people.

They turn sensible mothers into women who argue about napkin colours and floral arrangements, and mine had always been protective at the best of times.

But this was not a seating plan.

This was my home.

The flat was not some careless gift from rich parents or a shiny thing bought because I fancied high ceilings.

It was years of work, pressure, missed dinners, cancelled holidays, and the sort of exhaustion that makes you sit on the edge of the bed in your work clothes because undressing feels like another task.

My parents had helped me when I found it, and I never pretended otherwise.

But I had built my life around earning the rest.

It had floor-to-ceiling windows, wooden floors, a private lift, and a doorman who seemed to know everyone’s business before anyone had said a word.

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