I married Jonah for money while he was serving twelve years in prison. At first, I told myself it was just paperwork to keep my brother safe. But when Jonah walked free and opened a black box on my kitchen table, I learned his mother had chosen me for a reason.
I married Jonah for $2,000 a month while he was serving twelve years in prison, and I told myself it was survival, not love.
I was twenty-seven, raising my younger brother, Owen, and the final rent notice had been taped to our apartment door that morning.
Three years later, Jonah walked free, placed a black box on my kitchen table, and showed me the real reason his mother had chosen me.
That was the night I learned poverty had not made me invisible.
It had made me useful.
***
Owen saw the rent notice before I could hide it.
He was seventeen, too tall for his secondhand sneakers, and too proud to ask why I watered down soup.
“Is it bad, Sadie?” he asked.
I folded the notice.
“It’s paper. Paper likes to act important.”
Owen didn’t smile.
Two hours later, I got a call from a woman who worked for Celeste, the mother of a prisoner named Jonah. Celeste had gotten my name through legal aid after I applied for help with rent and Owen’s guardianship papers.
That should’ve made me hang up.
Instead, I listened because desperate people always listen one second too long.
My landlord wanted rent, Owen needed shoes, and pride had never paid an electric bill, I didn’t have a choice.
So I went to meet her.
Celeste’s office smelled like lemon polish and money.
“I have a shift in an hour,” I said.
“I’ll be brief, Sadie.” She folded her hands.
“I’m offering you $2,000 a month.”
“Your name.”
I stared at her.
“My son, Jonah, is serving twelve years,” she said. “He needs a wife on paper. Visit twice a month, write letters, and show the court he still has family.
Courts like roots. A wife gives him roots.”
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