I lifted my veil slowly, the way brides do in movies right before they kiss. Then I turned to the AV booth and raised one finger. The projection screens behind the altar flickered to life. “Actually,” I said into Ethan’s microphone, my voice steady as stone, “before anyone leaves, I have something to say. A wedding gift. For the groom.” The first slide appeared: bank statements. Ethan’s face drained. The wedding fund he claimed we shared? Withdrawn in cash, deposited into an account under Chloe’s name. The house deposit? Used to buy her a condo in Miami. Next slide: text messages. Six months of them. “Once Maggie signs the prenup reversal, we’re free.” “Her trust fund transfers to joint on the wedding day.” “Keep smiling at family dinners, baby.” The room went so silent I could hear Chloe’s heels scraping the marble as she tried to back away. “Oh, and the trust fund?” I turned to my father, who was already standing, jaw locked. “Daddy moved it into an irrevocable charitable foundation last Tuesday. In my name only. Ethan, you married air.” Two men in dark suits stepped from the back pews—forensic accountants my father had hired. “Mr. Ethan Cole,” the taller one said, “the funds you transferred were flagged as marital fraud in anticipation of a fraudulent marriage. We’ll need you to come with us.” Chloe lunged for the side door. My mother caught her by the elbow. “Sit down,” Mom said, in a voice I had never heard her use. “You are going to watch every second of this.” I laid my bouquet gently on the altar, unclipped my veil, and handed the microphone back to the priest. “Thank you all for coming,” I said. “The reception is still on. My treat. The groom and the bridesmaid will not be attending.” I walked down the aisle alone, and the entire church stood up and applauded.
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