Bride Threw My Bouquet Down, Then The Groom Found Her Secret-rosocute

The bride wanted me on my knees before the vows.

Not symbolically, not politely, not in the sweet way women kneel to fix a train or rescue a fallen veil.

She wanted the whole Blackthorn ballroom to see a florist bend.

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White roses slid across the marble after she threw the bouquet, and the sound was too soft for what it did to me.

Three hundred guests turned toward the aisle with champagne in their hands, their faces bright under the chandeliers.

Vivianne Rousseau smiled at them first, then at me.

“On your knees, staff,” she said.

I had built that bouquet with my own hands, after closing Carter Blooms at midnight and sending my sister Lily home with the last sandwich from the shop fridge.

The white roses were imported, the gardenias were impossible, and the blue silk ribbon came from my mother’s old supply box.

I used it because Vivianne wanted something antique and rare, something no other bride could touch.

She never asked what it cost me.

Women like Vivianne did not ask what anything cost unless they were trying to make it smaller.

I bent because the flowers were mine.

I bent because my shop was behind on rent.

I bent because Lily’s tuition deadline was three days away, and pride did not pay invoices.

But I did not cry.

That seemed to bother Vivianne more than anything.

She stepped closer, her veil shining like frost, and laughed loudly enough for the front tables to hear.

“You arrange flowers for women who get chosen,” she said, “so do not confuse that with being one.”

The phones came up.

I reached for the bouquet, my fingers trembling around the bruised petals, and told myself to breathe.

Then the ballroom doors opened.

Adrian Moretti entered without raising his voice, yet every man with an earpiece along the walls moved like the temperature had dropped.

His eyes moved from Vivianne to the floor, then to me.

I was still crouched in the aisle, holding the bouquet against my chest like it could shield me from a room full of rich strangers.

“Did she throw that at you?” he asked.

His voice was low, almost gentle, which somehow made the question worse.

I said it was fine.

He looked at me for one long second.

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