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Planning My Cheating Ex-Husband's Wedding

Chapter 4 No.4

Word Count: 814    |    Released on: Today at 18:37

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soft gray walls, the art I'd carefully selected, the framed photo from our engagement on the c

d ripped at his tie. "I need a drink," he muttered, s

eels a soft hum against the hardwood floors, and went strai

e to myself to find what I knew was there.

amily's investment firm. He left early, after a clumsy attempt to kiss me go

ront door clicke

f old leather and his cologne. I went to his sleek iMac, my heart a cold, heavy stone in my chest.

ktop ap

rching for credit card statements. It didn't take long to f

ng. My breath caught. A charge for five thousand dollars.

views. A place you took a lover, not a place you went with your groomsme

i

for his phone number. A single number appeared over and over again, always l

e's contacts. I opened WhatsApp. Th

man from the text

thodical. The last, desperate part of me that had hoped

y clothes. The strength drained out of me, leaving a hollow ache. Trust doesn't just cra

re his phone was mysteriously out of service. It wasn't

down the call log, almos

w it. A numbe

's private cell.

ing. It had lasted for twenty minutes. A c

sound fill

ured into the wound. His mother knew. She knew, and she stoo

ca Albright wasn't just Alex's mistress-she was the daughter of Charles Albright, the media mogul whose networks and billions propped up half of Harriso

ined it was

s was a conspiracy. A family that had co

nto something else. Something cold and

encrypted folder. I uploaded it to a priv

San Francisco Bay. The fog was rolling in, swallowing the Golden Gate Br

perfectly planned, was now no

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Planning My Cheating Ex-Husband's Wedding
Planning My Cheating Ex-Husband's Wedding
“On the night of our luxurious Las Vegas honeymoon, I thought I was the happiest bride alive. Then his phone lit up with a text from a woman named Jessica. "Last night was incredible, Alex. I'm so proud of you for finally getting rid of her." I dug into his phone and discovered they had been together for months, and his mother had been helping them hide it. Less than 72 hours after our wedding, Alex staged a minor car crash and faked amnesia. Lying in the hospital bed with Jessica holding his hand, he looked right at me. "I'm sorry... who are you? Do I know you?" His family used this pathetic farce to frame me as the villain, driving me out of the hospital. By the time I got back to San Francisco, they had changed the locks and dumped my belongings on the street like garbage. I had poured my heart into building a perfect life with him, only to realize I was just a pawn in their cruel, collective joke. The betrayal and public humiliation were suffocating. But I didn't give them the satisfaction of a hysterical scene. I gathered my evidence and filed for an annulment, legally erasing our marriage as if it never happened. Then, I adopted a pseudonym and became the city's most powerful event planner. When Alex was forced to hire me to plan his new wedding with Jessica, I smiled and took the contract.”