
“She is already in the trap. Tomorrow she signs the papers, and that lake house will finally belong to us.”
I heard those words in my husband’s voice just hours after he had promised to cherish me forever at the altar, and I felt as if the world were collapsing around me. My name is Bridget, and until that very moment, I was certain I had married for love.
I met Wyatt two years ago at a small diner in downtown Nashville. He was attentive and patient, acting like the kind of man who truly listens when a woman has spent too long standing on her own two feet.
I had inherited a modest property in Franklin from my father, along with a decent amount of savings from my years working as a freelance interior designer. I was never wealthy, but I was stable, organized, and careful with my life.
My friends tried to warn me about his family. “His mother meddles in everything he does,” my friend Heather told me. “That family is drowning in debt,” my cousin Simon insisted.
I refused to listen because Wyatt always knew how to calm my nerves. He would take my hand, kiss my brow, and tell me that he wanted a peaceful life with me, away from any drama.
I believed his lies. The wedding was simple and elegant, held in a small chapel with white lilies and a string quartet.
I wanted to head straight to the cottage we had rented to start our new life, but his mother, Martha, insisted we spend the first night at her old estate in Belle Meade to receive a family blessing. It felt strange to me, but Wyatt squeezed my hand and told me it was just one night to make his mother happy.
I gave in once again. In the early hours of the morning, I woke up feeling parched. The house was dark and silent, except for a low murmur drifting up from the kitchen.
I walked downstairs quietly, thinking Martha was just getting a glass of water, but I stopped at the base of the stairs when I heard Wyatt speaking. “She’s already fallen for it. Tomorrow she signs, and her dad’s house will be ours.”
The air felt thick in my lungs. Martha replied in that sweet, toxic tone she used to manipulate everyone. “Don’t let her overthink it. First, bring up the power of attorney, then the joint account. If she gets suspicious, tell her it’s just for taxes and the marriage filing.”
I gripped the banister so hard my knuckles turned white. “What if she tries to call her brother?” Wyatt asked.
“You won’t let her. And you definitely won’t let her talk to Wesley,” Martha snapped. “That boy watches everything too closely.”
Wesley was Wyatt’s younger brother. He was the only one who had stayed quiet during dinner and the only one who looked at me with pity when Martha interrupted me.
I retreated to my room and stared at my wedding dress hanging on the door. Just a few hours ago, I was a happy bride, but now I realized I was just prey in a house full of hunters.
I thought about screaming or running, but a cold instinct told me to stay calm. I grabbed my phone and texted Wesley. “I heard everything. They want to steal my house. Please help me, and don’t tell them I know.”
He responded in seconds. “Stay quiet. Don’t go out the front door. I’m coming through the side porch.”
When he slipped into the room, his face was pale. “I am so sorry,” he whispered. “I knew they were capable of a lot, but I didn’t think they’d use a wedding to ruin someone.”
My eyes blurred with tears. “You said they’ve done this before? What does that mean?”
Wesley sighed and looked at the floor. “You aren’t the first person they’ve used. You’re just the first one they’ve tried to take everything from.”
I felt a shiver down my spine as we began to plan. We sat on the floor by my suitcase, and Wesley explained that Wyatt had once scammed an ex-girlfriend out of a fake investment.
Martha was the mastermind, teaching him exactly what to say to make women feel special. “I wanted to leave this house a long time ago,” Wesley admitted. “But they swore they changed. Then I heard them asking about the value of your father’s land.”
I looked at him with a mix of rage and heartbreak. “I told Wyatt those things because he was my husband.”
“No,” Wesley said firmly. “They were just looking for a way to drain you dry.”
I stopped crying and let fury take over. “We need proof.”
For the next two hours, we worked with total focus. I changed every password I owned, from my bank accounts to my cloud storage, and enabled two-step verification.
Wesley recorded a video of me stating my name, the date, and the fact that I did not authorize any signatures. Then, he recorded his own testimony about his family’s history of fraud.
“If they try to play the victim tomorrow, they won’t be able to hide from this,” Wesley said. At 5:25 AM, I messaged my brother, Austin. “Emergency. Come to the Belle Meade house at 8:30. Bring your lawyer. Don’t call me.”
He replied instantly. “I’m on my way.”
Before the sun came up, Wesley handed me a small digital recorder. “I use this for my college lectures. Today, it’s going to catch their lies.”
By 7:00 AM, I was dressed in simple clothes with my hair tied back. I looked like a tired bride, but I felt like a soldier.
I went downstairs to find Martha making breakfast and smiling like a saint. “Good morning, dear. Did you sleep well?”
I looked her in the eye. “Like a rock.”
Wyatt kissed my cheek, and the touch made my skin crawl. “After we eat, my mom has some papers to help us get our lives organized.”
I forced a smile. “Of course. Family is always there to help.”
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