“Of course, Diane,” I said sweetly. “But before I sign, let’s read it out loud. For transparency. Since we’re all family.” Her smile twitched. I flipped to page one and started reading. Clause after clause — I get nothing in a divorce, I forfeit any inheritance, I can’t work outside the home without her written approval. Guests started shifting. Marcus’s aunt actually gasped. Then I hit clause 14. “In the event of infidelity by the wife, she surrenders all claims. In the event of infidelity by the husband — ” I paused. ” — the wife agrees to public silence and receives a one-time payment of ten thousand dollars.” I looked up. “Interesting number, Diane. Very specific. Almost like someone’s been planning for it.” Marcus went pale. That’s when I pulled out my phone. See, three weeks ago, a woman named Ashley messaged me on Instagram. She was seven months pregnant. She thought I should know who Marcus really was before I walked down the aisle. I’d spent those three weeks quietly moving my things to my sister’s apartment, closing our joint account, and transferring the wedding deposit refund — which was in MY name, because Diane insisted the “charity case” pay her own way as a test — back to my savings. I stood up. “Diane, you were right about one thing. I do bring nothing to this family. Because there is no family.” I turned to the guests. “Congratulations to Marcus and Ashley, due in November. The reception food is paid for — please, enjoy.” I dropped the unsigned prenup in Diane’s wine glass. Marcus finally spoke. “Wait — please — ” I slid off the engagement ring, set it on his bread plate, and walked out in my cream dress and my sad little nursing shoes. Two months later I got promoted to charge nurse. Six months later, Diane’s lawyer called asking if I’d sign an NDA. I told him my rate was ten thousand dollars. He didn’t laugh. Neither did I.
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