That was the first interesting detail. She wasn’t angry. She was afraid.
Ethan stepped away from the altar, his face pale. He looked older than I remembered. Less certain. As if the life he had chosen had been wearing him down behind closed doors.
“Paige,” he said quietly, “this isn’t the time.”
I almost smiled. “Funny. That’s exactly what I thought the night before our wedding.”
A few guests shifted uneasily. Someone in the second row whispered, “Oh my God.”
Vanessa’s mother rushed to her side while Ethan’s father strode toward me with the same smug authority he had always used to control a room. “You need to leave,” he said. “Immediately.”
I reached into my purse, took out my phone, and held it up. “I will. Right after I ask the bride one question.”
Vanessa looked like she might collapse.
I stepped closer. “Did you know about me before Ethan ended our engagement?”
She swallowed hard but said nothing.
“Did you know,” I repeated, louder now, “that he was still sharing a bed with me, still planning our wedding, while your families arranged this upgrade?”
The room seemed to tilt.
Vanessa’s father stood. “That is inappropriate.”
“No,” I said, keeping my eyes on his daughter. “What’s inappropriate is pretending this is a fairytale wedding when it started with lies.”
Ethan ran a hand over his mouth. He avoided my gaze. He avoided hers. That told me everything.
Vanessa looked at him. “Answer her.”
He stayed silent.