I turned to face the pews, envelope raised, and my voice carried clean to the back of the cathedral. “Ethan, before I answer the officiant, I would like to return something that belongs to you and Marley.” The organist stopped mid-note. Marley’s champagne flute froze halfway to her lips. I slid out twelve glossy photographs, timestamped, from the Charleston Grand’s penthouse suite, dated every Thursday of the last four months, the nights Ethan told me he was at his father’s ranch. I let the first one drop onto the marble aisle. Then the second. Then the third. The gasp from three hundred throats sounded like a wave breaking. “The suite was booked under my credit card, Ethan, because you never bothered to update the joint account after we opened the wedding fund. So technically, I paid for every night you spent cheating on me with my cousin. I would like a refund.” His mother stood up. His father sat down hard. Marley tried to bolt for the side door and walked directly into my brother Colton, all six foot four of him, arms crossed. Then I turned to the officiant, who was still holding the vow book like a shield. “Father Whelan, I withdraw my consent. But do not send these people home hungry. The reception is fully paid for, and my father, God rest him, always said a Lowry never wastes good bourbon.” I lifted the veil off my face, handed it to my mother, and walked back down the aisle to a standing ovation from the groom’s own grandmother. In the vestibule my lawyer was already waiting with the prenup and the deed to the house I had quietly kept in my name alone. Ethan called me forty-one times that night. I answered once, only to say, “Check the envelope again. The last page is the restraining order.” Then I danced at my own reception, in my mother’s lace, with an empty seat where a groom should have been, and I have never in my life felt more married to myself.
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