Sister-In-Law Smashed My Bracelet, So I Cancelled Her Brother’s £98M Deal-Teptep

My sister-in-law smashed my £350,000 agate bracelet, and I immediately cancelled the £98 million investment her younger brother was about to receive.

The sound it made was not loud enough to shake the room.

It was only a crack against the tiled floor, a brittle split, a scattering of deep-red pieces beneath the dining table.

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But every person in that family home heard what it meant.

The steam from the fish still rose in the middle of the table.

A mug of tea had gone untouched beside my father-in-law’s hand.

In the kitchen, the kettle had clicked off minutes earlier, and nobody had thought to pour.

Liang Man stood beside my chair with my empty wrist still reddened from her grip.

She had the bright, satisfied look of someone who believed humiliation was safest when done in public.

My mother-in-law, Sun Fengying, did not gasp.

She did not ask whether I was hurt.

She only cracked another sunflower seed between her teeth and said, “Broken is a sign of peace.”

My father-in-law, Xia Zhengde, kept his teacup lifted and his eyes lowered.

My husband, Xia Yan, stared down at his phone as though a screen could make him innocent.

I looked at the floor.

The bracelet had broken into several pieces, but one shard was larger than the rest.

I bent, picked it up, and held it in my palm.

It was cold, smooth on one side and cruelly sharp on the other.

That bracelet had been part of my mother’s dowry.

She had chosen it for me herself, not because it was the most expensive piece she owned, but because she said the colour suited a woman who had learnt to survive without asking permission.

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