The Wedding Morning She Sold My Washing Machine For £1,000 Cash-Teptep

The morning after my wedding, before the house had even stopped smelling of flowers and hairspray, my mother-in-law sold the washing machine in our new home.

It was five o’clock in the morning.

Not a soft five o’clock either, not the sort that comes with birdsong and fresh air, but the damp, grey kind that presses against the windows and makes the whole house feel as if it has not properly woken.

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I was lying under the duvet with pins still aching in my scalp and the faint mark of make-up at the edge of my pillowcase.

Yesterday had been my wedding day.

I had married Chu Ming Yu in front of relatives, colleagues, neighbours, people who had cried, people who had drunk too much tea, and people who kept saying how lucky we were to be starting married life in a home already prepared.

Prepared by me, mostly.

I had chosen the sofa, the wardrobes, the dining table, the curtains, the kitchen bits, the mugs, the fridge, the cooker and the washing machine.

I had spent weeks comparing prices, checking measurements, asking delivery men whether the hallway was too narrow, and standing in the kitchen imagining the ordinary comfort of life after the wedding.

That was all I had wanted.

Not luxury.

Not showing off.

Just a home that worked.

By the time the last guest had gone and the last congratulations had faded, it was close to one in the morning.

I had been awake since three.

When I finally lay down, I did not even have the strength to remove every pin from my hair.

I remember Ming Yu saying, half asleep already, that we would tidy everything properly tomorrow.

I remember thinking tomorrow could wait.

Then my mother-in-law walked into the bedroom with a basket of dirty clothes.

“Wan Ning,” she said, standing beside the bed as if she had every right to be there. “Wake up. It is five o’clock. You still have washing to do.”

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