When my late father’s will tied his inheritance to staying married for five years, I thought I could manage. But my husband’s secret affair and my brother’s manipulation shattered everything.
At the lawyer’s office, the will revealed a condition: both my brother and I had to remain married for five years to inherit. Henry seemed unbothered, but my husband Ted looked guilty.
Over the next two weeks, Ted and I barely spoke, our marriage hanging by a thread. Meanwhile, Henry, who was carefree about his own marriage, taunted me. His smug attitude stung.
When he invited us to dinner, Sarah exploded, revealing that Henry’s work trips were actually excuses to escape their marriage. That night, Henry showed up at my house, claiming I won the inheritance game—his marriage was over, but mine was still intact.
Soon, Henry moved into the guest house. Despite my failing marriage, I felt guilty when I let him stay after his split. But things grew worse when I discovered Henry had staged his divorce, knowing about Ted’s affair all along. He had manipulated me for the inheritance.
The farm, my refuge, was no longer mine. Henry’s smugness faded when he left the house the next day, and I found a letter from my father, revealing that the inheritance wasn’t just about land—it was about family and truth. My father trusted me to make the right choice: to help Henry.
Weeks later, when Henry returned, broke and remorseful, I allowed him to stay, with the condition he work for it. Slowly, things improved, and Henry changed. He found someone who brought out the best in him.
By the end, we both realized that our father’s true inheritance wasn’t just land—it was a second chance at family.
Leave a Reply