He looked sick with regret.
“You should have told me,” I said.
“I know. I was wrong.”
That hurt, but it also felt honest. Ethan wasn’t perfect. He was good. There was a difference.
I took his hand. “Today isn’t about humiliating anyone for sport. It’s about protecting something good.”
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He nodded. “Tell me what you need.”
By ten-thirty, the bridesmaids had realized the schedule was no longer theirs to control. Vanessa called six times. Kendra knocked on the original suite door. Someone texted, Where are you? Hair is here. Marissa replied through the wedding account with a single message: Schedule updated. Please proceed to the venue by 1:00 p.m.
When they arrived, they were met with two surprises.
First, they were no longer part of the wedding party. Their names had been removed from the reprinted program. Instead of listing bridesmaids, it now read: The bride is accompanied today by family and lifelong friends whose love has carried her here.
Second, they were seated in the second row on the far side, escorted there by staff who were polite enough to leave no room for a scene.
Vanessa tried anyway.
She cornered me in the corridor outside the bridal room fifteen minutes before the ceremony, her face pale with anger beneath flawless makeup.
“What the hell is this?” she hissed. “You can’t do this to me on your wedding day.”
I looked at her carefully, at the woman I had once trusted like a sister who had answered that trust with envy sharpened into sabotage.
“I already did,” I said.
Her mouth dropped open. “Because of some private conversation?”
“Because you planned to destroy my dress, lose my rings, and bragged about trying to sleep with my fiancé.”
“That’s not what I meant.”
I almost smiled. “I recorded it.”
For the first time all morning, she looked afraid.
Then she said the one thing that revealed everything. “So you’re throwing away years of friendship over a man?”
“No,” I said. “I’m ending a fake friendship over character.”
She had nothing left to say.
When the music began and my brother took my arm to walk me down the aisle, I realized the wedding I had rewritten wasn’t smaller than the one I had planned.