I Became Guardian of My Twin Sisters After Mom Died — My Fiancée Pretended to Love Them Until I Heard What She Really Said

Six months ago, I was planning a wedding and a honeymoon in Maui. I was a 25-year-old structural engineer with deadlines, bills, and a fiancée who had already picked out baby names. My biggest worries were seating charts and whether we should upgrade the espresso machine on our registry.

Then my mother, Naomi, died in a car accident on her way to buy birthday candles for my ten-year-old twin sisters, Lily and Maya. In a single phone call, my life split in two — before and after.

Our father, Bruce, had left years ago when Mom told him she was pregnant with the twins. He never came back. So when she died, there was no debate, no family meeting. The girls were mine.

I moved back into Mom’s house that night. I traded my apartment and bachelor routines for permission slips, grocery lists, and bedtime tears. Grief didn’t come in quiet waves — it came in logistics. School drop-offs. Therapy appointments. Figuring out how to braid hair without pulling too hard.

Jenna, my fiancée, moved in two weeks after the funeral. She said she wanted to help. She packed lunches, braided hair, and read bedtime stories she found online. When Maya added her name as an emergency contact in a glittery notebook, Jenna cried and said she’d always wanted little sisters.

I thought I was lucky.

Last Tuesday, I came home early from work. The house smelled like cinnamon buns. I heard Jenna in the kitchen — but her voice wasn’t soft.

“You’re not staying here long,” she told the girls. “A foster family would be better. When the adoption interview happens, you’ll say you want to leave.”

Maya started crying.

“Stop,” Jenna snapped. “Or I’ll throw your notebooks away.”

Then she got on the phone with a friend and dropped the mask completely. She talked about the house, the insurance money, and getting her name on the deed. She said she’d make the girls miserable until I gave in.

I walked back out the door before she saw me.

That night, I pretended to agree with her. I said maybe we should give the girls up. I suggested we move the wedding up — make it big, invite everyone.

She was thrilled.

What she didn’t know was that my mom had installed nanny cams years ago. I found the footage and saved everything.

At the reception, just before vows, I played the recordings. Her voice filled the ballroom — cold, calculating, cruel. Gasps echoed through the crowd. She tried to call it “out of context.”

It wasn’t.

Security escorted her out. By the next morning, it was over.

A week later, the adoption was finalized. In the judge’s office, Maya cried softly as she signed her name. Lily squeezed her hand and whispered, “We won’t be separated now.”

That night, we made spaghetti. We lit a candle for Mom. After dinner, Lily leaned against me.

“We knew you’d choose us,” she said.

I couldn’t speak. I just cried.

But for the first time in months, the tears didn’t feel like everything falling apart.

They felt like something finally being held together.