She looked done waiting.
My father knocked once and stepped inside. He saw the dress. His face turned pale, then red. “Maya.”
“I’m wearing it,” I said.
“No, baby.”
“Yes.”
Tessa whispered, “You can’t walk in front of two hundred people like that.”
I turned toward her. “That’s exactly why I can.”
Downstairs, the string quartet had begun playing. Guests were being seated beneath white roses and crystal chandeliers. The Whitmores had invited judges, bankers, donors, senators, people who adored spotless reputations and filthy secrets.
They believed I was a fortunate girl marrying above myself.
They had no idea I had spent six months marrying beneath myself with my eyes wide open.
I stepped into the ruined dress. The cold stain pressed against my skin. My father’s jaw tightened, but he gave me his arm.
At the chapel doors, he whispered, “Tell me what to do.”
I squeezed his hand.
“Walk slowly.”…
Part 2
The doors opened, and every conversation stopped.
Two hundred guests turned toward me. First came the smiles. Then confusion. Then horror.
The stain could not be ignored. It stretched from my chest to my waist like a wound displayed in public. Someone dropped a program. Someone whispered, “Oh my God.” Cameras rose, then lowered, then rose again.
At the altar, all the color left Daniel’s face.
Beside him, Eleanor Whitmore smiled.
Not openly. She was far too practiced for that. It was small, sharp, triumphant.
She thought I would sob. She thought I would flee. She thought my humiliation would prove her point in front of her entire world.
I kept walking.
My father’s arm shook beneath my hand, but I did not. Step after step, under the chandeliers, through the white roses, toward the man who had lied to me in restaurants, in bed, and in front of my dying mother’s photograph.
Mother-daughterretreats
Daniel leaned forward when I reached him. “Maya,” he hissed, “what the hell are you doing?”
I smiled like a bride.
“Your mother forgot one thing,” I whispered. “I know the secret that will destroy you both.”
His eyes darted toward Eleanor.
Good.
Fear knew fear.
The priest cleared his throat. “Dearly beloved—”
“Wait,” I said.
A ripple passed through the room.
Daniel caught my wrist. “Don’t embarrass yourself.”
I looked down at his hand until he let go.
Then I turned toward the guests.
“I apologize for the delay,” I said, my voice even, carrying through the microphone hidden in the floral arch. “Before we begin, I’d like to thank Eleanor Whitmore for the note she left with my
A murmur lifted.
Eleanor’s smile disappeared.
I raised the stained paper. “Know your place,” I read.
Daniel whispered, “Maya, stop.”
I didn’t.
“For a long time, I thought my place was beside Daniel. I ignored the warnings. The secret calls. The missing money from our joint account. The way his mother answered questions meant for him.” I looked at him. “But then I remembered my actual place.”
I reached into my bouquet and took out a small silver flash drive.
“My place is senior forensic accountant for the state attorney’s financial crimes division.”
The room went silent enough for Eleanor’s inhale to be heard.
Most people knew I worked in finance. Very few knew exactly where, because Daniel had always introduced me as “doing numbers for the government,” as though my career were only a pastime.
I nodded to Tessa.