Emily Carter POV:
The plush white carpet of the Bellagio honeymoon suite felt cool against my bare feet. I stood before the floor-to-ceiling window, a sea of glittering lights that was the Las Vegas Strip spread out below me. Alex's white dress shirt, the one he'd unbuttoned hours ago, was the only thing I wore. It smelled of him-of champagne, a hint of expensive cologne, and victory.
A flute of champagne, still cold, was in my hand. I took a small sip, the bubbles fizzing on my tongue. Hours ago, I'd been reciting vows I'd helped write. It wasn't just a wedding; it was my masterpiece. The culmination of my career as San Francisco's most sought-after wedding planner.
Every detail had been mine. The specific varietal of white rose-the Vendela, for its perfect ivory bloom and subtle scent. The string quartet's selection, a little-known piece by Richter that swelled at the exact moment we said 'I do.' I had poured all of my professional perfectionism, all of my belief in a perfectly constructed life, into this marriage.
A pair of strong arms wrapped around my waist from behind. Alex's chin rested on my shoulder, his voice a low, magnetic rumble against my ear. "What are you thinking about, Mrs. Harrison?"
That name. It sent a jolt straight through me, a warm current of possession and belonging. I smiled, turning in his arms to face him. "Just admiring my work."
I leaned in and kissed him. His mouth was familiar, passionate, a perfect fit for mine. But as my fingers traced the strong column of his neck, I felt it. A subtle, unusual stiffness in the muscles there.
I dismissed it instantly. He was exhausted. We both were. It had been a long, perfect day.
He pulled back just enough to look at me, his blue eyes intense. "You were a dream today, Emily. I honestly can't believe I have you."
He said the words, the perfect words, but his eyes flickered. For less than a second, something else passed through them-something complex and unreadable. A shadow.
A knot of unease tightened in my stomach, but I pushed it down, drowning it in the overwhelming happiness of the moment. I was overthinking. I was a planner; I looked for flaws. There were no flaws here.
"You have me," I whispered, and we finished the last of our champagne together. The sweet, celebratory taste filled my mouth again, and the atmosphere shifted, becoming charged and intimate.
His hand slid from my waist, his fingers ghosting under the hem of the shirt. "Now," he murmured against my skin, "I think it's time for the real wedding night to begin."
A blush crept up my neck. I put a hand on his chest, gently pushing him back. "You first. Go take a shower. You smell like a distillery."
He chuckled, a deep, easy sound that usually soothed me. He kissed my forehead. "Yes, my queen."
Alex turned and walked toward the opulent marble bathroom. He shrugged off his suit jacket, tossing it carelessly onto the king-sized bed, onto the pristine silk duvet.
His phone slipped out of the inner pocket. It landed face-up on the pillow next to where I would sleep.
I didn't think anything of it. I walked over to the bed, picking up my leather-bound planning binder from the nightstand. I wanted to look over the timeline one last time, to savor the perfection of the day I had created.
The bathroom door clicked shut. A moment later, the powerful rush of the shower filled the suite, a wall of white noise cutting me off from him.
The silence that remained was peaceful. I sighed, a sound of pure contentment, and flipped through the pages of my binder.
Then, a soft vibration broke the quiet.
I looked up. In the dim light of the suite, Alex's phone screen was glowing.
A notification banner was displayed at the top. A new message.
The name of the sender was Jessica. I'd never heard him mention a Jessica.
I couldn't make out the full text, just the name and a line of words after it.
My heart gave a hard, painful thud. A cold dread, sudden and inexplicable, seized me.
It's a work colleague, I told myself. A friend sending congratulations.
But it was after midnight. On his wedding night. A message from a woman I didn't know.
I put down my binder. My hand moved toward the phone, hesitating, my fingertips hovering an inch above the cool glass screen.
The sound of the shower was a steady, rushing countdown.
I took a sharp breath, my decision made. I picked up the phone.
Emily Carter POV:
My fingers were cold, trembling slightly as I held his phone. Alex had laughingly added my fingerprint to his Touch ID weeks ago. "Proof of love," he'd called it. "Nothing to hide."
Back then, I'd thought it was romantic. Now I understood: he'd been so confident his secrets were safe. He must have kept Jessica on a different app, or a different phone entirely-one I'd never seen. The phone I was holding was just for show.
The phrase echoed in my mind now, a sick, hollow joke.
My thumb pressed against the home button. The phone unlocked.
The messaging app was right there on his home screen. I tapped it. The conversation with "Jessica" was at the very top, marked as unread.
I opened it. The last message, the one that had just arrived, burned itself onto my brain.
"Last night was incredible, Alex. Definitely worth the wait. Now that the wedding's behind you, when do I finally get you to myself?"
The air left my lungs. The world tilted, the glittering lights of Vegas blurring into a meaningless smear. Time stopped.
I read the words again. And again. Each letter was a shard of glass, twisting in my gut.
"Last night." That was our wedding eve. He'd told me he was with his groomsmen after the bachelor party. A final night of freedom.
My thumb, moving on its own, scrolled up. I saw a history of messages. Flirtatious, intimate, filled with inside jokes and clandestine plans. This wasn't new. This had been going on for a long time.
The sweet taste of champagne rose in my throat, turning to bile. I scrambled off the bed and ran to the main suite's wet bar, gagging over the small sink. Nothing came up but a dry, heaving retch that tore at my insides.
I splashed cold water on my face, gripping the edge of the marble counter. I stared at my reflection. A pale, wild-eyed stranger stared back, her face a mask of horror. Minutes ago, I was the happiest woman alive. The bride in her perfect, custom-made fairy tale.
Now I was just the fool.
The humiliation was a physical force, a crushing weight that made it hard to breathe. I had planned the perfect wedding, down to the last detail, and I was the only one who didn't know it was all a perfectly executed lie.
Rage began to bubble up through the shock, hot and cleansing. I wanted to storm into that bathroom, smash the phone against the marble wall, and watch the truth shatter his handsome, lying face.
But a lifetime of self-reliance held me back. I had clawed my way up from nothing to build my business, my reputation. I didn't solve problems with screaming. I solved them with strategy. Emotional outbursts were a luxury I'd never been able to afford.
I forced a deep, ragged breath into my lungs. Then another. I walked back to the bed, my movements stiff, robotic. I picked up my own phone.
I needed evidence.
With shaking hands, I photographed every screen of their conversation. The damning messages, the dates, the times. When I was done, I checked to make sure the photos had synced to my secure cloud storage, then deleted them from my phone's local gallery.
I picked up Alex's phone again. I marked Jessica's new message as read, swiping the notification away. I placed the phone back on the pillow, exactly where it had been.
It was a flawless execution. As if nothing had happened.
I sat on the edge of the bed, my back to the bathroom. My body was trembling, a fine, uncontrollable shiver. I stared at the frosted glass door, at the blurry silhouette of the man moving behind it. He wasn't my husband. He was a monster.
Every "I love you," every tender touch, every promise he'd made at the altar today-all of it replayed in my head, twisted into the most vicious mockery.
I thought of his mother, Mrs. Harrison. The way she'd looked at me during the ceremony. I had mistaken it for reserved approval. Now, I re-examined it. Had it been... pity?
A horrifying thought struck me. What if they all knew?
The sound of the shower cut off.
The sudden silence was deafening. My heart hammered against my ribs.
The click of the door handle turning was the loudest sound I'd ever heard.
What do I do? Confront him? Pretend?
Alex walked out, a fluffy white towel knotted around his waist, his dark hair damp. He was smiling, a lazy, satisfied smile. He saw me sitting on the bed.
"What's wrong, baby?" he asked, his voice thick with suggestion. "Couldn't wait for me?"
Emily Carter POV:
His voice, meant to be seductive, scraped against my raw nerves. I forced my lips into a smile that felt like cracking glass.
"I... I'm just a little tired, Alex," I managed to say, my own voice sounding faint and distant. "It's been an overwhelming day."
I stood up, moving away as he reached for me.
His brow furrowed slightly. He stepped closer, his smile replaced with a mask of concern. He tried to touch my forehead. "You do look pale. Are you feeling sick?"
The thought of his touch made my stomach clench. I took a half-step back, an involuntary flinch.
His eyes darkened for a fraction of a second. The reaction was too quick for him to hide completely. But he covered it smoothly, his voice dripping with false solicitude. "You must be exhausted. My poor girl. Go take a hot bath. We can just sleep tonight."
His kindness was a form of torture. I nodded numbly and escaped into the bathroom, closing the door behind me.
I turned the shower on full blast, stepping under the scalding water. Only then, with the sound roaring in my ears, did I let the tears fall. They were silent, hot tears of rage and humiliation, mixing with the water and vanishing down the drain.
That night, we lay on opposite sides of the massive bed, a cold, silent canyon between us. His breathing was even, peaceful. He was asleep. I stared into the darkness until the sun began to rise.
The next morning, I told him I wasn't feeling well. I canceled the private brunch, the couples massage, the helicopter tour over the Grand Canyon. I told him I wanted to go home. Back to San Francisco.
"But Emily, it's our honeymoon," he protested, his frustration barely concealed.
"I'm sick, Alex," I said, my voice flat. "I want my own bed."
He couldn't argue with that without looking like a monster. Annoyance radiated from him as he made the calls, booking us on the first flight out.
The ride to the airport was in a silent, air-conditioned limousine. I stared out the window at the gaudy spectacle of Las Vegas, the city of cheap thrills and fake promises. It felt fitting.
"Honey, when you're feeling better, we can plan another trip," Alex tried, his voice attempting a placating tone. "The Maldives, maybe? Whatever you want."
"Mmm," I said, not turning my head.
I could feel his patience fraying. In his world, problems were solved quickly. My mood, this sickness, it was an inconvenience, a disruption to his perfect schedule. It wasn't about me; it was about him.
At the airport's first-class lounge, he excused himself to make a call. I watched him from across the room, his back to me. He was probably reporting to Jessica, complaining about his difficult new wife.
On the plane, I put on a sleep mask and noise-canceling headphones the moment we sat down. I leaned my head against the window and shut him out completely.
The flight was a few hours of suspended agony. I felt him shift beside me, could sense his growing irritation. He wanted to talk, to smooth things over, to get his compliant wife back. But I gave him nothing.
He was losing control, and he didn't like it. The Emily he knew was attentive and accommodating. This silent, cold stranger was someone he didn't recognize.
I'm sure he wondered if he'd slipped up somewhere, said the wrong thing. But he would have dismissed it. In his mind, I was just being emotional. A hysterical bride, overwhelmed by it all.
The plane touched down at SFO.
As we waited for our luggage at the carousel, he reached for my hand out of habit. I let my bag slip, bending to pick it up and neatly avoiding his touch.
That was the last straw. His face hardened.
"What is your problem, Emily?" he said from behind me, his voice low and cold. "This little tantrum has gone on long enough."
I stopped walking and turned to face him. I looked directly into his eyes. There was no anger in my expression, just a profound, empty calm.
"I told you," I said, my voice quiet but firm. "I'm just tired."
The utter lack of emotion in my voice seemed to unnerve him more than any fight could have.
The drive to our apartment was thick with a heavy, suffocating silence. I watched the familiar streets of San Francisco roll by. The beautiful bay-front apartment we shared, the one I had so lovingly decorated, no longer felt like a home. It was a cage. A beautifully appointed trap.
My mind was already working, planning my next moves.
Alex, beside me, was fuming. I could feel it. He was trying to figure out how to 'fix' this, how to fix me. How to get his perfect life back on track.
He had no idea the tracks had already been blown up.