My Wicked STEPMOTHER Married Me Off to a 75-Year-OLD POOR Man… What happened next…

The same man she had helped. The same man who spoke gently to her. Was he part of this? Had he asked for this? Or had Felicia forced it?

Her thoughts spiraled until she could no longer breathe properly.

And then one question settled heavily in her chest.

Why did Felicia choose him?

Out of all the men in Zima Town, why Baba Akutu?

The answer came the next day.

Soma overheard Felicia speaking to a neighbor.

“That old man is poor,” Felicia said dismissively. “No family, no wealth. Let her go and struggle there. Meanwhile, my Caro will marry into real money.”

Soma stood behind the wall, her hands trembling.

So, that was it.

She was being removed, thrown away, so Caro could shine without competition. Deep inside, Soma was helpless, but she understood one truth: Felicia wanted to force her out of the house under the guise of marriage, and also punish her with a poor old husband.

She quickly made up her mind that if the suffering became unbearable, she would run away from Baba Akutu.

By the end of the week, preparations had already begun.

Simple. Rushed. Unceremonious.

No celebration. No joy. Just a transaction.

And as Soma sat quietly in her room, staring at the small bag that held her entire life, one thought refused to leave her mind.

Baba Akutu had always looked at her like he knew something.

Something she didn’t.

Something no one else did.

And as the wedding day drew closer, that thought became more unsettling. Because deep down, Soma began to feel that this marriage was not what it seemed, and that the truth, whatever it was, would change everything.

The wedding morning arrived without joy.

No music filled the compound. No relatives gathered with laughter and loud greetings. There were no colorful decorations, no excitement in the air.

It felt less like a celebration and more like something quiet, something being buried.

Soma sat on a wooden stool in the small room she had occupied for years, staring at the plain white casual gown. It was meant to be a bridal outfit, but there was nothing special about it. No sparkle. No beauty. No care. Just something to cover her.

Outside, she could hear Caro laughing.

That laughter cut deeper than anything else, because it wasn’t just happiness.

It was relief.