“Em?” Ryan called, cheerful and unsuspecting. “Babe, you here? I grabbed tacos—figured you’d forget to eat again.”
Emily stared at the doorway as he stepped into the bedroom, then stopped dead. His smile vanished when he saw the papers in her hands and the lifted mattress.
“What are you doing?” he asked, voice suddenly flat.
She could barely force the words out. “What is this, Ryan?” She raised the highlighted email. “What does ‘once I’m on her dad’s company paperwork’ mean?”
Color drained from his face, then surged back in a blotchy red. “You went through my stuff? Seriously?”
“That’s all you have to say?” Emily’s voice shook. “You’re planning to marry me, cash in on my family’s company, then divorce me in six months?”
He raked a hand through his hair, looking everywhere but at her. “It’s not what it looks like. Those emails were… I don’t know, exaggerations. Just venting to a friend.”
“A friend named Lena?” Emily held up one of the photos. In it, Ryan and the brunette were tangled on a couch, clearly more than friends. “Because your venting looks a lot like cheating.”
Ryan’s jaw clenched. “That was before we got serious.”
“The email is dated twelve days ago.”
He opened his mouth, closed it again. “Emily, listen. I got in over my head with debt before I met you. My startup almost crashed. Lena helped me out, and I said some things I shouldn’t have. Your dad’s company—look, it’s easy money from his perspective. He barely notices anything. I was just… thinking aloud. I wasn’t really going to do it.”
“You wrote a whole timeline,” she said hoarsely, flipping through the pages. “You listed exactly how long you’d stay married, what you’d ask for in the divorce, how you’d make me look unstable so I’d settle fast.”
Ryan stepped closer, palms up. “I panicked. I thought if I could just get secure financially, everything would be fine. And then I fell in love with you, okay? Things changed.”
“Did they?” Emily asked. “Because these emails are from after you proposed.”
He reached for her hands, but she stepped back. “You’re throwing everything away over some stupid files you shouldn’t have seen,” he snapped. “Do you have any idea how crazy you sound? Listening to some random fortune teller?”
“It doesn’t matter who told me,” she whispered. “You wrote this. You hid it. You lied.”
He exhaled sharply. “Fine. I messed up. But the wedding is tomorrow. The deposits are paid, our families are here, everything’s planned. Do you really want to humiliate both of us over something that hasn’t happened?”
Emily felt a cold, clear anger settle over her. “You were counting on me being too embarrassed to walk away.” She stood, gathering the papers into a neat stack. “I’m not that girl.”
She tucked the documents into her tote bag. “I’m leaving. Don’t contact me tonight.”
Ryan cursed under his breath. “Emily, be reasonable—”
“I am being reasonable,” she said. “For the first time in this entire relationship.”
She walked out without looking back.
In her car, she called her best friend, Hannah. Between ragged breaths, she explained everything.
“Em, this is… awful,” Hannah said. “Come stay with me. We’ll figure it out.”
Later, as they sat on Hannah’s couch surrounded by half-packed wedding favors, Emily opened her laptop and searched the name on the lease. The apartment was across town, in a building known for short-term rentals. Using one of Ryan’s printed emails, she found Lena’s full name and Instagram account—dozens of photos of Ryan, tagged at bars and rooftop pools, all captioned with inside jokes and flame emojis.
One post from three weeks ago froze her: a selfie of Lena kissing Ryan’s cheek, the caption reading, “Can’t wait until the money hits and we’re out of this dump.”
The next morning, Emily messaged Lena from a throwaway account and asked to meet, pretending to be a potential client for Lena’s freelance photography. They arranged to meet at a coffee shop.
When Emily arrived and introduced herself, Lena’s eyes widened. “Wait… you’re Ryan’s fiancée.”
“Not for much longer,” Emily said, setting her phone on the table, recording. “I just want the truth.”
Over the next forty minutes, Lena talked—about the affair, the promises, the plan to “ride the marriage wave” and walk away with a settlement. She didn’t realize how much she was revealing until Emily slid the printed emails across the table.
Lena went pale. “Okay… maybe he embellished. But he said you were cold, that you barely liked him, that your dad owed him for all the free work he’d done.”
Emily laughed bitterly. “My dad has never met him outside two boardroom meetings.”
When Emily finally left, she sat in her car, staring at the wedding venue notification lighting up her phone: Rehearsal in three hours. Her dress hung in the backseat, a cloud of white tulle.
By the time she drove to the venue, she had made a decision—not just about the wedding, but about how much of the truth she was willing to hide.
She walked into the empty chapel, stood at the front where she was supposed to say her vows, and pictured the faces of everyone she loved. Her hands shook, but her resolve did not. Tomorrow, things were not going to go the way Ryan expected.
The morning of the wedding dawned bright and cloudless, cruelly beautiful. Emily dressed in silence at the bridal suite, surrounded by mirrors that reflected a version of herself she barely recognized—lace sleeves, soft makeup, hair pinned with her grandmother’s pearls. Hannah hovered nearby, eyes red from lack of sleep.