Bride Heard Her Fiancé’s Secret Plan Before The Wedding Started-kieutrinh

The night before my wedding, I stood in my childhood bedroom while my mother adjusted the lace at my shoulders and told me I would be the most beautiful bride in Savannah.

The room smelled like hairspray, roses, and the lemon cleaner she used whenever she wanted a house to look like nothing bad had ever happened inside it.

My dress hung heavy around me, soft in the places it should have been soft and scratchy at the wrists where the lace rubbed when I moved.

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Outside, the porch light hummed above the steps.

Downstairs, my father was checking his phone beside the kitchen island, pretending not to be emotional by asking whether the florist had confirmed the delivery time for the third time that evening.

My name is Clare Mitchell.

I was 29, and by every visible measure, I was about to have the kind of wedding people call perfect when they do not know what is happening underneath it.

Forty guests were expected at 8:00 a.m.

The flowers had already been paid for.

The chairs had been counted twice.

The little printed ceremony timeline was sitting on my dresser beside my earrings, my hotel confirmation, and a folded note from my mother that I had not yet been brave enough to open.

Jacob had always looked good in the frame my family gave him.

He knew when to shake hands.

He knew how to speak to older women at dinner.

He remembered names, asked polished questions, and looked at my father with just enough admiration to make my father feel wise instead of used.

For a long time, I mistook that for character.

My mother loved him because he was steady in public.

My father liked him because he seemed ambitious but not reckless.

I loved him because I had built a private version of him out of small moments, and I kept choosing that version over the man standing in front of me.

There were signs.

Of course there were signs.

Jacob never said “I love you” first.

He waited until I said it, then smiled and repeated it back like a man returning something borrowed.

He asked about my father’s contacts too often.

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