Inside the envelope were three things: a paternity test naming Adrian as the father of Vivienne’s eighteen-month-old son, a printed screenshot of him promising her half of my trust fund the moment we said our vows, and a notarized letter from Vivienne herself confessing that she had been sleeping with him since our engagement party — and that she was done being his backup plan. I unfolded the paternity test first and held it up to the light so the front row could read it. My mother-in-law’s champagne flute slipped from her fingers and shattered on the aisle runner. Then I turned to the officiant, my voice steady enough to carry to the choir loft. “I object to my own wedding,” I said. “On the grounds that the groom is already a father, already a liar, and already engaged — spiritually — to my maid of honor.” Adrian lunged for the envelope. My father stepped between us. Vivienne walked calmly from the bridesmaid line to my side, took the microphone from the officiant’s shaking hand, and addressed the guests: “I came here today to give Camille back her life. Adrian asked me to help him marry her for the trust. I said yes, then I recorded every call.” She pressed play on her phone. His voice filled the cathedral — every ugly promise, every cruel joke about me, every plan to divorce me within eighteen months. The trust attorney, seated in row four, stood up and revoked the prenuptial addendum on the spot. Adrian’s mother fainted into the lilies. I lifted my veil, handed it to Vivienne, and walked down the aisle alone — past three hundred witnesses, past the cake with our names on it, past the man who thought a whisper could steal a life. At the doors, I turned back once. “Enjoy the reception, Adrian,” I said. “You’re paying for it.”
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