The unblinking eye of my front porch security camera showed my maid of honor kissing my fiancé, not twelve hours before she was supposed to hand me my bouquet.
A synchronized headache was their excuse for leaving the rehearsal dinner early.
Apparently, the only cure was to stumble into my house together and fall into our bed.
Right now, she’s probably sipping a mimosa, texting me heart emojis about how excited she is for my big day.
They’re expecting a heartbroken bride, fragile and weeping at the altar.
What they’re getting instead is a feature presentation, a brand-new wedding slideshow I edited this morning, with a special screening for our 200 guests—especially her father, the minister who is about to marry us.
The Night Before the Rest of My Life: A Toast to Too-Close Comfort
The clinking of champagne glasses sounded like a thousand tiny alarm bells. I held my flute up, the bubbles fizzing against the rim, and forced a smile that felt brittle enough to crack. Across the table at the rehearsal dinner, my fiancé, Mark, was laughing at something my maid of honor, Chloe, had whispered in his ear. Her hand, adorned with perfectly manicured nails the color of blood, rested on his forearm. It wasn’t just resting; it was anchored there.
I took a slow sip of champagne. It tasted like acid and sugar. This was a familiar scene, a little tableau I’d witnessed in different forms for the past year. Chloe’s casual, lingering touches. Mark’s easy, accepting smiles. I’d told myself it was nothing. I was 46, not some paranoid teenager. Chloe was vivacious and tactile; that was just her way. She was twenty years my junior, a firecracker to my slow-burning candle, and I’d convinced myself her energy was just… a lot. For everyone.
But tonight, the night before my wedding, the gesture felt different. It felt proprietary. Her thumb was stroking the fine hairs on his arm, a gentle, repetitive motion that made my stomach clench. He wasn’t pulling away. He was leaning into it, his body angled toward her, creating an intimate little pocket of space at a table full of our closest friends and family. My son, Leo, caught my eye from across the room and gave me a small, questioning look. He saw it, too.
I lowered my glass, the crystal cool against my tense fingers. I’d spent two decades raising Leo on my own, building a landscape architecture business from the ground up, and guarding my heart with the precision of a fortress designer. Mark was supposed to be my reward, the peaceful harbor after a long, stormy sea. And Chloe… Chloe was supposed to be my sister in all but blood, the one who understood. Yet, watching them now, I felt a familiar, cold dread creeping up my spine. It was the same feeling I got when I knew a client was about to pull the plug on a massive project, a sense of an ending masquerading as a celebration.
The Unspoken History of a Smile
Chloe had always been the main character. Even when we first met at a yoga studio ten years ago, she’d somehow made my struggle with downward dog into a hilarious anecdote about her own double-jointed perfection, charming the entire class. I was drawn to her magnetic field, her effortless ability to command a room. She was the kind of beautiful that seemed both accidental and meticulously crafted, all flowing blonde hair and a laugh that could make a statue smile. She made me feel younger, bolder.
But over the years, I’d started to see the machinery behind the magic. Chloe didn’t just like attention; she required it, breathing it in like oxygen. Every friend’s success had to be filtered through the lens of her own life. When I landed the city park contract, she’d spent the celebration dinner talking about a vague modeling offer she’d once received. When I’d first introduced her to Mark, her immediate reaction wasn’t just happiness for me, but a detailed, forensic analysis of him, delivered with the intensity of a detective. “He’s handsome, Lin. Almost… too handsome for his own good. You’ll need to keep an eye on that.”
At the time, I’d laughed it off as Chloe being Chloe—dramatic, a little possessive. Now, her words echoed in my head with a sinister new meaning. Her smile, which was currently directed at my fiancé, was a performance I knew well. It was wide and dazzling, but it never quite reached her eyes. Her eyes were constantly scanning, assessing, looking for the next camera, the next audience, the next opportunity.
I watched as she finally pulled her hand away from Mark’s arm, only to place it on the back of his chair, her fingers still brushing his suit jacket. It was a subtle shift, but it was a claim. She was a vine, beautiful and green, wrapping herself around my sturdy oak until you couldn’t tell which was which. And I, the fool who’d planted her there, had been admiring the foliage, never once thinking to check the roots.
Echoes in an Empty Glass
The speeches began. My father went first, his voice thick with emotion as he talked about seeing his little girl finally find a true partner. I squeezed Mark’s hand, and he squeezed back, but his eyes flickered toward Chloe for a fraction of a second. I told myself I was imagining it. Paranoia was a weed, and I refused to let it grow in the garden I’d so carefully cultivated.
Then it was Chloe’s turn. She stood up, a vision in an emerald green dress that hugged every curve. She didn’t use notes. She never did. “For those of you who don’t know me, I’m Chloe, Linda’s maid of honor,” she began, her voice smooth as silk. “When Linda first told me about Mark, I was skeptical. I mean, who could possibly be good enough for this incredible woman?”
The room murmured in agreement. She paused, letting the moment hang in the air. “But then I met him. And Mark…” She turned to him, her expression softening into one of deep, almost reverent affection. “I have to admit, I got a little jealous.” She laughed, and the room laughed with her. “I told Linda, ‘If you don’t marry this man, I will.'” More laughter. Mark beamed at her, a goofy, flattered grin on his face.
My own smile felt painted on. It was a joke. A standard, slightly inappropriate maid-of-honor joke. But the way she looked at him wasn’t funny. It was hungry. She went on, telling stories that were supposed to be about me but were really about her proximity to me. The time she helped me through my first big heartbreak. The time she talked me into starting my own business. She was positioning herself not as my friend, but as my creator. The architect of my happiness.
By the time she raised her glass—”To Linda and Mark. May you be as happy as you’ve made me, watching you fall in love”—I felt a profound emptiness. She’d managed to make my wedding rehearsal about her own emotional journey. Mark was looking at her with pure adoration, the way a fan looks at a rock star. I drained my glass, the champagne doing nothing to fill the hollow pit in my stomach.
The Synchronized Headache
The party was winding down. The string trio had packed up, and the low hum of conversation filled the private dining room. I was talking to Mark’s aunt from Cleveland when I saw Chloe press her fingertips to her temples.
“Everything okay?” I asked, walking over to her.
She gave me a wan smile. “Just a killer migraine coming on. The champagne, I think. I should probably head home and pop some Excedrin before it gets worse. I need to be bright-eyed for you tomorrow.” She gave my arm a squeeze, a gesture that felt like a cheap imitation of genuine affection.
“Of course,” I said. “Get some rest. I’ll see you in the morning.”
She hugged me, her cheek cool against mine. As she pulled away, she caught Mark’s eye. A minute later, as Chloe was saying her goodbyes by the door, Mark came up behind me and wrapped his arms around my waist. He kissed my neck, but it felt perfunctory. “I’m not feeling so great myself, honey,” he murmured into my ear. “The stress of the day, I guess. My head is absolutely pounding. I think I’m going to call it a night, too.”
I turned in his arms and looked at him. Really looked at him. His eyes seemed a little unfocused, his smile a little tight. “A headache? Really?”
“Yeah, it came on all of a sudden,” he said, rubbing his own temples in a perfect mirror of Chloe’s earlier gesture. “I just need to lie down in a dark room. I want to be one hundred percent for you tomorrow, baby.”
It was too neat. Too perfectly timed. The synchronized headache. A cold, sharp suspicion, more potent than any paranoia, pierced through the fog of my denial. They were leaving together. Not in the same car, of course. They were smarter than that. But they were leaving at the same time, with the same flimsy excuse. I watched as he kissed me goodbye, promising to call me before he went to sleep. Then I watched as he walked out the door, just a few moments after my best friend. The door swung shut behind him, leaving me alone in a room full of people, celebrating a future that had suddenly become terrifyingly uncertain.
The Unblinking Eye: A Silence Filled with Flowers
I woke up before dawn on my wedding day to a silence that felt heavier than sleep. The house was still, the air thick with the scent of the thousands of white roses and peonies that had been delivered the day before. The fragrance, meant to be romantic, was cloying, funereal. I lay in my bed, alone, and stared at the ceiling. Mark hadn’t called last night. I’d texted him around midnight. Hope your head feels better. Can’t wait to be your wife. The message remained unread.
A knot of anxiety tightened in my chest. I threw back the covers and paced the bedroom, my bare feet cold on the hardwood floors. Maybe I was wrong. Maybe I was letting a decade of self-reliance curdle into suspicion. They both had stressful jobs. A long, emotional night. It was plausible. Coincidences happen. But the image of Chloe’s hand on Mark’s arm, of their mirrored excuses, was burned into my mind.
At 6:15 AM, my phone buzzed. It was the florist. “Morning, Linda! Just wanted to confirm the delivery for the bridal bouquets will be there around 7 AM. The boutonnieres are with them.”
“Great, thank you,” I said, my voice hoarse. I hung up and leaned against the window, watching the gray light of dawn spill over the manicured lawns of my neighborhood. I needed to see something real, something concrete. My security system. I’d installed the high-definition cameras last year after a string of break-ins in the area. One was pointed directly at my front porch. I could check to see if the early delivery van had driven by. It was a flimsy excuse for what I really wanted to do, but it was enough. My heart hammered against my ribs as I unlocked my phone and opened the app, its familiar blue icon suddenly feeling like the portal to my own personal judgment day.
Rewinding to a Different Truth
The live feed showed my empty porch, washed out in the pre-dawn light. A digital timeline stretched across the bottom of the screen, a neat blue line representing hours of recorded motion. My thumb trembled as I dragged it backward. Past 5 AM, when the neighbor’s cat had sauntered by. Past 3 AM, when the motion-activated porch light clicked on for a passing raccoon. Past midnight.
I kept scrolling back, my breath held tight in my chest. I felt like an archaeologist digging for a cursed artifact, knowing I shouldn’t want to find it but unable to stop myself. I stopped at 10:47 PM. That was roughly when Chloe and Mark would have gotten home after leaving the restaurant. My street was empty. The porch was dark. I felt a wave of relief so intense it almost made me dizzy. I was a fool. A jealous, middle-aged woman creating drama where there was none. I was about to close the app, to laugh at my own absurdity, when I saw it.
Further back, at 11:18 PM. A flicker of movement. The bright headlights of a car pulling up to the curb. It wasn’t Mark’s car. It was a taxi. My finger hovered over the play button, a tiny triangle that held the power to either confirm my sanity or shatter my world. I pressed it.
The taxi door opened. A woman in an emerald green dress stumbled out, laughing. Chloe. My blood went cold. She turned back to the taxi, and a man emerged after her. He was wearing a dark blue suit. He paid the driver, and as the taxi pulled away, he turned. The porch light, triggered by their arrival, flooded the scene in stark, unforgiving high-definition. It was Mark.
A Porch Light Confessional
The footage had no sound, but I didn’t need it. Their actions were screaming. Mark looped his arm around Chloe’s waist, pulling her flush against him. Her head fell back, and her laughter was visible, a wide, silent O of triumph. They stood there for a moment, caught in the buttery glow of the porch light, a perfect little island of intimacy. This wasn’t the awkward hug of two friends saying goodnight. This was something else entirely.
Chloe reached up and cupped his face, her thumb stroking his cheek. He leaned into her touch, his eyes closing for a second. Then, he dipped his head, and his mouth found hers. It wasn’t a tentative peck. It was a deep, searing kiss, a desperate collision of two people who had been waiting for this moment all night. Her hands tangled in his hair, pulling him closer, while his snaked down her back, pressing her body into his until there was no space left between them. They were a single, writhing silhouette against my own front door.
I watched, frozen, as they finally broke apart, breathless. Mark fumbled in his pocket for his keys—my keys, the ones to the house we were supposed to build a life in. He unlocked the door, and they practically fell inside, his arm still locked around her waist. The door clicked shut, plunging the porch back into darkness. The clip ended.
I couldn’t breathe. The phone slipped from my numb fingers and clattered onto the floor. The screen didn’t crack. It just lay there, dark and silent, having delivered its verdict. They hadn’t gone home to their separate apartments to nurse their separate headaches. They had come here. To my house. To our bed. The unblinking eye of the camera had captured it all, a silent, digital witness to the demolition of my life.
The Geometry of Betrayal
A wave of nausea washed over me, hot and violent. I stumbled to the bathroom and retched into the toilet, but nothing came up. There was just the dry, acidic heave of a body in shock. I splashed cold water on my face and stared at my reflection in the mirror. The woman looking back was a stranger—her skin pale, her eyes wide with a horror that felt ancient. The faint lines around her eyes, which I’d always thought of as laugh lines, now looked like cracks in a fragile vase.
I walked back into the bedroom and picked up my phone. I replayed the video. And again. And again. I needed to be sure. I zoomed in on their faces, on their hands, on the way her dress rode up her thigh as he pressed against her. It was undeniable. It was clinical. A simple, brutal equation of betrayal. Chloe + Mark = The End of Everything.
The initial shock began to recede, and in its place, a strange and terrifying calm settled over me. The rage was there, a white-hot supernova deep in my gut, but it was contained, controlled. It wasn’t a wild, screaming fury. It was a cold, precise anger, the kind I used when a contractor tried to screw me over on a project. It was methodical. It was a force of pure, unadulterated clarity.
I sat on the edge of the bed, the wedding dress I was supposed to wear in a few hours hanging on the closet door like a ghost. The plan began to form in my mind, not as a conscious thought, but as a series of simple, logical steps. There would be no tearful confrontation. No screaming match. No giving them the satisfaction of my pain. They had written the script for this tragedy. I would simply direct the final, unforgettable scene. I downloaded the video file from the app to my phone. Then, I forwarded it to my laptop and saved it to a blank USB drive I kept in my desk drawer. It was a tiny, black piece of plastic. An instrument of justice.
The Longest Walk: Makeup Over the Cracks
The doorbell rang at precisely 8 AM. It was the hair and makeup artist, a bubbly woman named Tricia who smelled like hairspray and optimism. “Happy wedding day!” she chirped, wheeling in a suitcase full of powders and potions. “Are you ready to be transformed?”
“More than you know,” I said, my voice unnervingly steady. I led her to the guest room I’d set up as a prep area, the mirrors and lights already in place. As I sat in the high-backed chair, I avoided my own reflection. I didn’t want to see the emptiness in my eyes.
Tricia chattered away as she worked, her brushes dusting and blending. She talked about the weather, about another bride she’d had last week, about the miracle of waterproof mascara. “It can withstand anything,” she said, tapping the wand against the tube. “Happy tears, sad tears, you name it.” I just nodded, a silent, hollow doll in her chair. Each stroke of her brush felt like an act of spackling, covering up the deep, structural cracks that had formed in my foundation.
She was sectioning my hair to curl it when my phone buzzed. It was a text from Mark. Morning, beautiful. Feeling so much better. Today’s the day. Can’t wait to see you. The casual cruelty of it stole my breath. He was lying next to me, in my bed, just one room away, and texting me this garbage. Or maybe he’d already left, slinking out before I woke up. It didn’t matter. The lie was the thing.
“Everything okay?” Tricia asked, her hands paused in my hair. “You look like you saw a ghost.”
I forced a smile into the mirror. “Just wedding day jitters,” I said. The words tasted like ash in my mouth. “Don’t worry,” I added, looking at the mask she was so expertly applying. “Make me look beautiful.” Make me look like a bride. Make me look like a woman who isn’t about to burn the whole world down.
A Vow of Silence
An hour later, my son Leo arrived. He was dressed in his tux, looking handsome and grown-up. He stopped in the doorway, his smile faltering as he looked at me. He’d always been able to read me better than anyone.
“Mom? You okay?” he asked, his voice low. Tricia was conveniently grabbing something from her car, leaving us alone for a moment.
I turned to him, the carefully constructed composure threatening to shatter. I wanted to tell him everything. I wanted to crumble into his arms and let him take care of me, just for a minute. But I couldn’t. This was my battle to fight. “I’m fine, sweetie. Just a lot to take in.”
He didn’t buy it. He walked over and took my hand. “It’s Mark, isn’t it? And Chloe. I saw them last night. The way they were… it wasn’t right.”
A single, hot tear escaped my eye, and I quickly wiped it away, careful not to smudge Tricia’s work. “It’s more than not right, Leo.” My voice was a whisper. The urge to show him the video was overwhelming, but I resisted. It wasn’t his burden to carry. Not yet. I just needed him to trust me. “Listen to me,” I said, my grip on his hand tightening. “No matter what happens today, I need you to know that I love you and that I’m going to be okay. Can you do that for me?”
He searched my face, his expression a mixture of confusion and concern. But he saw the steel in my eyes, the grim resolve. He nodded slowly. “Yeah, Mom. Of course.”
After he left, I went to my office. On my desk were two identical silver USB drives. One was labeled “Wedding Slideshow” in my neatest cursive. It was filled with pictures of Mark and me, of our families, of our lives before and after we met. The other was blank. I picked up the blank one, the one that now held a single, 62-second video file. I slipped it into the small, beaded clutch that matched my dress. The other one, the collection of happy, fraudulent memories, I left on the desk.
The Weight of Two Rings
The dress was heavy. Layers of lace and silk and tulle settled around me, a beautiful, expensive cage. I stood before the full-length mirror, a stranger in white. My hair was swept up in an elegant chignon, tiny pearls woven through it. My makeup was flawless, my lips painted a demure shade of rose. I looked like a bride. The picture of happiness and hope. It was the most convincing lie I’d ever told.
My phone buzzed again. It was Chloe. A picture of her and the other bridesmaids, all in their dusty-rose dresses, clinking mimosa glasses. The caption read: We’re ready for you, Mrs. Almost-Hansen! So excited my face hurts from smiling! XOXO. The sheer, unadulterated gall of it was breathtaking. I stared at her smiling face on the screen, the face of the woman who had kissed my fiancé on my porch and then crept into my bed hours earlier. My rage, which had been a cold, hard stone in my chest, began to glow with heat.
Someone knocked on the door. It was my father, ready to escort me. In his hand, he held a small, velvet box. “The rings,” he said, his voice thick. He opened it. There they were, nestled on the white satin. Mark’s simple platinum band and my own, a delicate ring of diamonds designed to fit against my engagement ring. The symbols of our eternal love and commitment.
I reached out and touched Mark’s ring, its surface cool and smooth. This object was supposed to represent trust. Fidelity. A sacred promise. Now, it was just a piece of metal. A prop. The ethical considerations of what I was about to do flickered in my mind. Was it cruel? Yes. Was it public? Absolutely. But what they had done was a private cruelty designed to make a public fool of me. My response had to be equal in scale. It wasn’t just revenge. It was a correction. A rebalancing of the universe. I closed the box and handed it back to my father. It was time.
A Smile Forged in Ice
“Ready, sweetie?” my dad asked, offering me his arm.
I took a deep breath and looked at my reflection one last time. I practiced a smile. It wasn’t the soft, joyful smile of a bride. It was something sharper, harder. A smile forged in the coldest corner of a broken heart. It was a weapon. It was a promise.
“I’m ready,” I said, my voice clear and strong.
Walking toward the waiting car, I felt a strange sense of peace. The anxiety was gone, replaced by a singular, unwavering purpose. The questions that had plagued me for months—was I imagining things? Was I being paranoid?—had been answered in the most brutal way possible. And in that brutal certainty, I found my strength. They thought I was the quiet, stable, predictable Linda. The woman who plans gardens and avoids confrontation. They were about to find out how quickly a garden can be overgrown, how a woman can bloom into something they never saw coming.
I settled into the back of the vintage Rolls-Royce, the clutch with the USB drive resting in my lap like a small, dark heart. I was no longer a victim being led to the slaughter. I was the director of a play that had been in rehearsal for far too long, and I was on my way to the theater for opening night. And I was going to make damn sure it got a standing ovation.
The Slideshow: An Altar of Lies
The church doors swung open, and the first notes of the string quartet swelled to greet me. At the end of the long, sun-drenched aisle, Mark was waiting. He looked perfect, his face lit up with a smile that, to the 200 guests assembled, surely looked like pure adoration. But I could see the faint lines of exhaustion around his eyes, the slight tremor in his hand as he adjusted his tie. I knew it wasn’t nerves. It was guilt. Or maybe just a hangover.
Walking down that aisle on my father’s arm felt like moving through water. Everything was slow, distorted. The smiling faces of our friends and family blurred into a watercolor wash of pastels. My eyes were fixed on two people. Mark, standing at the altar of our lies. And Chloe, standing beside him, her maid-of-honor bouquet trembling slightly. She met my gaze and gave me a radiant, conspiratorial smile, as if we were sharing in this perfect moment together. The hypocrisy was so profound it was almost artistic.
And there, standing before them all, was the officiant. Chloe’s father. Minister David Allen, a kind, gentle man with a booming voice and a deep, unwavering belief in the sanctity of marriage. He beamed at me as I approached, his eyes crinkling with paternal pride for his daughter and for me, the woman he was about to welcome into the fold. The irony was a physical weight, pressing down on my chest. He was about to unknowingly bless a union that his own daughter had desecrated just hours before. I handed my bouquet to Chloe, our fingers brushing for a moment. Her skin was warm. Mine was ice.
The Last Supper
The ceremony was a masterclass in surrealism. I repeated my vows, the words “to have and to hold, in sickness and in health, to be faithful to you” tasting like poison on my tongue. Mark’s voice was steady as he promised to honor and cherish me, his eyes locked on mine. I wondered what he was thinking. Was he replaying last night in his head? Did he feel any remorse at all, or just the thrill of getting away with it?
When Minister Allen pronounced us husband and wife, Mark leaned in to kiss me. I turned my head just enough so his lips met my cheek. It was a small, almost imperceptible gesture, but I felt him tense. A flicker of confusion crossed his face before he masked it with a public smile. The crowd erupted in applause, and we walked back down the aisle, hand in hand, a perfect picture of newlywed bliss.
The reception was held in a beautifully restored barn, twinkling with fairy lights and filled with the scent of roasted chicken and expensive wine. We made our grand entrance. We did our first dance, a clumsy, disconnected shuffle to a song that had once meant the world to me. I moved in his arms like a wooden doll, my mind a million miles away, counting down the minutes.
During dinner, the toasts began. Chloe’s father stood, his face glowing with pride. “To see my daughter stand beside her best friend on this glorious day… it fills my heart,” he said, his voice ringing with sincerity. “Linda, you have always been like a second daughter to us. And Mark, you are the son we never had. Your commitment to each other is a testament to the power of love and faith.” A lump of ice formed in my throat. I raised my glass with everyone else, the charade reaching its fever pitch. This wasn’t a wedding reception. It was our last supper.
The Quiet Hand-Off
After the plates were cleared and the cake was cut, the DJ, a young man with impossibly trendy glasses, approached our table. “Folks, we’re about five minutes away from the childhood memories slideshow. You guys ready?”
Mark grinned, squeezing my hand under the table. “Ready as I’ll ever be. Hope you didn’t include too many awkward bowl-cut photos of me, Lin.” He looked at me, expecting a laugh. I gave him a tight, thin smile.
“Just a few,” I said. This was it. The point of no return. I stood up, smoothing the front of my dress. “I think I used an older version of the file on the laptop. I have the final one on a drive in my clutch. Let me just give it to him to make sure he has the right one.”
“Oh, okay,” Mark said, already turning to talk to his uncle. He didn’t suspect a thing. Why would he? I was Linda. Dependable, meticulous, predictable Linda.
I walked over to the DJ booth, my heels clicking softly on the polished concrete floor. The clutch felt strangely heavy in my hand. “Hi,” I said, my voice low and even. “We made a last-minute change to the slideshow. Could you use this one instead?” I held out the small, black USB drive.
“Oh, sure thing,” he said, taking it from me without a second glance. “No problem at all. The one you gave me earlier was called ‘Wedding_Slideshow_Final.’ This one is just ‘Memories.’ Is that right?”
“That’s the one,” I said. I watched as he pulled the silver drive from his laptop and inserted the black one. He clicked a few times, and a preview thumbnail popped up on his screen. It was too small for him to see what it was, just a dark square with a splash of light. “All set,” he said cheerfully. “Showtime in two minutes.” I nodded and walked back to my seat, my heart beating a slow, steady drum against my ribs. It is done.
Our Feature Presentation
“Alright, everyone!” the DJ’s voice boomed through the speakers. “If I can have your attention! The bride and groom have put together a special slideshow of their favorite memories for all of you to enjoy. Let’s give them a round of applause!”
The lights in the barn dimmed, and a huge projection screen behind the head table flickered to life. Mark put his arm around my chair, his smile full of anticipation. Chloe leaned forward, her eyes sparkling, ready to see the photos of her and me through the years. Her father, Minister Allen, sat at the table next to ours, watching the screen with a gentle, paternal smile.
But the first image wasn’t a grainy photo of me in a diaper. It was the stark, high-definition view of my front porch from the night before. A collective, confused murmur rippled through the guests. Mark’s arm stiffened around my chair. Chloe’s smile froze on her face.
Then, the taxi pulled up. The silent figures emerged. The porch light flared on, illuminating them in perfect, damning clarity. A few people gasped. I saw Chloe’s hand fly to her mouth. Mark snatched his arm away from my chair as if he’d been burned. The kiss. It filled the massive screen—a passionate, greedy, undeniable act of betrayal. The footage showed them stumbling inside. My house. My front door. Then the screen went black for a second before the clip started again from the beginning, on a loop. The taxi. The kiss. The door. Over and over.
The silence in the room was absolute, a thick, suffocating blanket of shock and horror. I watched Chloe’s face crumble, her skin turning a blotchy, mortified red. I saw her father’s expression shift from confusion to dawning agony, his eyes wide, his mouth agape. Mark was staring at me, his face pale, a look of pure, unadulterated panic in his eyes.
I stood up slowly. I picked up the microphone from the table that was meant for thank-you speeches. It felt cool and heavy in my hand. The room was still silent, save for the faint whir of the projector, endlessly replaying their sin for our 200 guests. I tapped the microphone once. The small sound made several people jump.
I looked out at the sea of stunned faces, then at Mark, then at Chloe, and finally, at her heartbroken father. I took a breath, and spoke, my voice calm, clear, and ringing with a terrible finality.
“The gifts are in the back. The marriage is over.”