“I have proof,” Tamara announced, waving the envelope. “Claire slept with Ethan’s brother Daniel at the lake house. She’s carrying his baby. I have the text messages and the sonogram.” She started passing printed pages down the aisle. Ethan’s mother stood up, hand over her mouth. My father’s face turned the color of ash. I didn’t move. I didn’t cry. I walked, slow and steady in my three-inch heels, straight past Tamara to the AV table where the videographer was still rolling. I unplugged his microphone, plugged in mine, and turned toward the crowd. “Tamara, sweetheart,” I said, “before you finish handing those out, could you tell everyone whose phone number is on the top of those texts?” She froze. I nodded to my cousin Ben in the balcony, and the projection screen behind the altar lit up with a screenshot. It was Tamara’s own iMessage thread with Daniel. Every flirty message. Every hotel receipt. Every ultrasound photo, sent from her phone, not mine. “I found out three weeks ago,” I said. “Daniel confessed. So did the fertility clinic Tamara used my insurance card at.” The room went silent enough to hear the AC hum. Ethan stepped down from the altar, walked past Tamara without a glance, and stopped in front of me. “Is any of it yours?” he asked quietly. “None of it,” I said. He took my hand. Then he turned to the pastor. “Keep going.” Tamara started screaming that the screenshots were fake. My father-in-law, a retired federal judge, calmly asked security to escort her out along with Daniel, who had gone white in the second pew. The pastor cleared his throat, smiled at us, and asked Ethan to repeat his vows. I heard Tamara’s heels clicking down the marble aisle behind me, fading. I didn’t turn around. I had a wedding to finish.
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