

Chapter 1 of Wedding Eve I Found Cruel Truth
The mirror reflected perfection—or what I had convinced myself was perfection. The wedding dress hugged my figure flawlessly, its intricate beadwork catching the warm light of the hotel suite's crystal chandelier.
Tomorrow, I would walk down the aisle to Peter Wright, the man who had rescued me from the shadows of my past and promised me a future filled with love and security.
I smoothed my hands over the silk bodice, my engagement ring catching the light. Three years of planning had led to this moment. Three years of believing I had found my fairy tale ending.
The suite door burst open with a force that made me jump. Leny stood in the doorway, her usually composed face pale and drawn. Her dark hair was disheveled, as if she'd been running her hands through it repeatedly, and her breathing came in short, sharp bursts.
"Leny?" I turned from the mirror, concern immediately replacing my bridal euphoria. "What's wrong? You look like you've seen a ghost."
She stepped inside, closing the door behind her with trembling fingers. In her hands, she clutched something that made my heart skip—a small, worn plush bunny with faded pink fur. I recognized it immediately. It was the recording toy we'd played with in high school, a silly gadget that could capture and replay short messages.
"Sharon, I..." Her voice cracked. She held the bunny like it might explode. "I was packing my old boxes today, getting ready for the move with Mark, and I found this. I accidentally pressed the playback button, and..."
The words died on her lips. She looked at me with an expression I'd never seen before—a mixture of anguish, fury, and something that looked almost like pity.
"Leny, you're scaring me." I took a step toward her, the train of my dress rustling against the plush carpet. "What is it?"
She held up the bunny, her hand shaking so violently I thought she might drop it. "You need to hear this. I'm so sorry, Sharon. I'm so fucking sorry."
Before I could protest, she pressed the worn pink button on the bunny's belly.
The sound that emerged was tinny and distant, filtered through years of dust and neglect. But the voices were unmistakably clear. Young voices, filled with cruel laughter.
"Dude, you actually think you can make Sharon Chilton fall for you?" The first voice belonged to Adam—Adam from high school, the boy who had made my life hell for four years.
"Please. Have you seen how she looks at me when I'm nice to her? She's so desperate for attention, it's pathetic." The second voice hit me like a physical blow. It was Peter. My Peter. But younger, crueler. "She'll be eating out of my hand within a month."
"What's the bet again?" Adam's laughter was sharp, cutting.
"If I can get the pathetic loner to fall in love with me—really fall in love, like write-me-love-letters, plan-our-future-together love—you owe me five hundred bucks." Peter's voice was casual, as if he were discussing the weather. "Easy money."
"And if you can't?"
"Then I'll do whatever you want for the rest of senior year. But trust me, it won't come to that. Sharon Chilton is so starved for affection, she'll believe anything I tell her."
Their laughter continued, but the sound seemed to fade as blood rushed to my ears. The elegant hotel suite spun around me, the crystal chandelier becoming a blur of fractured light.
My legs gave out.
I collapsed onto the velvet ottoman near the vanity, my wedding dress billowing around me like a deflated dream. The beadwork that had seemed so beautiful moments before now felt like tiny weights, dragging me down.
"Sharon?" Leny's voice sounded far away, though she was right beside me. "Sharon, say something."
I couldn't speak. Couldn't breathe. The recording had lasted maybe thirty seconds, but it had obliterated three years of my life in the span of a heartbeat.
Every moment with Peter flashed through my mind with sickening clarity. Our first conversation in the campus coffee shop, when he'd complimented my book choice. Our first date, when he'd listened so intently to my stories. The way he'd held me after my nightmares, whispering that he'd never let anyone hurt me again.
All of it. Every tender moment, every whispered promise, every time I'd felt safe in his arms—it had all been a lie. A game. A bet.
The grief hit me like a tsunami, raw and violent. I lurched forward, my hands flying to my throat as if I could physically remove the scream building there. But no sound came. The pain was too deep, too all-consuming for mere noise.
I stood abruptly, my movements jerky and uncontrolled. The mirror reflected a stranger—a woman in a wedding dress with hollow eyes and a face drained of all color. The dress that had represented hope and new beginnings now felt like a costume, a cruel joke.
My hands moved without conscious thought to the vanity, fingers closing around the sharp sewing scissors I'd used earlier to trim loose threads. The metal was cool and solid in my grip, the first real thing I'd felt since the recording began.
I turned to face the mirror again, raising the scissors.
"Sharon, no—" Leny started forward, but I was already moving.
The first cut sliced through the delicate lace at my shoulder, the sound sharp and satisfying. Beads scattered across the floor like fallen stars. I cut again, and again, methodically destroying the bodice that had taken months to perfect.
The silk gave way under the blades with a soft tearing sound. I worked in silence, my movements precise and deliberate. Each snip was a small act of violence against the lie my life had become.
The cathedral train came next. I grabbed handfuls of the expensive fabric and shredded it, watching years of dreams fall to pieces around my feet. The intricate beadwork that had cost thousands of dollars became nothing more than glittering debris.
Leny watched in stunned silence as I destroyed the dress, understanding instinctively that I needed this moment of destruction. When the last piece of lace fell to the floor, I stood among the ruins in nothing but my slip, breathing hard.
The woman in the mirror was no longer a bride. She was something else entirely—something harder, colder. Something that had been forged in the fire of betrayal and emerged unrecognizable.
"We're leaving," I said, my voice eerily calm. It was the first words I'd spoken since hearing the recording, and they sounded foreign to my own ears.
Leny nodded quickly, grabbing the hotel robe from the bed and wrapping it around my shoulders. "Where do you want to go?"
I looked at the destroyed dress one last time, memorizing the sight. Tomorrow, Peter would be waiting at the altar for a bride who no longer existed.
"Somewhere I can forget," I whispered. "Somewhere dark."
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