The first time I saw the marks across my sister’s back, the whole world seemed to disappear.
The bridal boutique went silent around me, but not in an ordinary way. It was the kind of silence that settles over a courtroom seconds before a verdict changes everything.
Mara stood on a small platform beneath the chandelier, wrapped in ivory satin while a seamstress adjusted the fabric around her waist. The dress was breathtaking…. Continue Reading
My sister was not smiling.
“Turn around, sweetheart,” the seamstress said gently.
Mara obeyed.
When the woman lowered the zipper, I saw them.
Dark, fresh lash marks ran across Mara’s back, cruel and unmistakable, like someone had written violence into her skin.
My breath stopped.
The seamstress gasped and stepped back.
“Oh my God.”
Mara saw my face in the mirror.
Every bit of color drained from hers.
She clutched the dress to her chest and whispered, “Please don’t.”
I stepped closer, slow and careful.
“Who did this?”
Her lips trembled.
“Elian.”
The groom.
The charming heir.
The man who kissed our mother’s hand at dinner and called my father “sir.” The man whose father, Victor Vale, smiled like he was purchasing people instead of greeting them.
My hands curled into fists, but my voice stayed calm.
“Why?”
Mara gave a short, broken laugh.
“Because I told him I was scared.”
The seamstress slipped out of the room in tears.
Mara grabbed my wrists.
“Listen to me,” she pleaded. “If I call off the wedding, Victor will destroy Mom and Dad’s company.”
My stomach turned cold.
“He already controls half their debt,” she continued. “He said he’ll call every loan, ruin every supplier contract, drag them through court, and make them lose the house.”
I stared at my little sister.
My bright, stubborn, fearless Mara.
The same girl who used to hide behind me during thunderstorms was now hiding inside a wedding dress from a monster in cufflinks.
“He said no one would believe me,” she whispered. “He said you’re just a divorced consultant with a cold face and no real power.”
That almost made me smile.
For years, men like Victor Vale had underestimated me because I wore simple black suits, spoke quietly, and never raised my voice unless I absolutely had to. They never asked what kind of consultant I was.
They never asked why federal prosecutors still answered when I called.
I touched Mara’s cheek.
“Did he threaten you in writing?”
Her eyes flickered.
“Emails. Voice notes. Photos. I saved everything.”
“Good girl.”
“But we can’t cancel,” she sobbed. “He’ll ruin us.”
I kissed her forehead.
“Then we won’t cancel it.”
Mara stared at me.
I looked at her reflection.
Then at the marks on her back.
“We’ll let them walk straight into it.”
Victor Vale arrived at the rehearsal dinner like a man who already owned tomorrow.