Bride Dumped At The Chapel Reveals The Flash Drive In Her Bag-ngyen

I was standing in my wedding dress when the man I loved ended our future with one sentence.

The chapel bells were ringing with the smug certainty of things already paid for.

The corridor smelt of white roses, floor polish and rain-soaked wool from coats hanging on the pegs near the entrance.

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My bouquet was in my left hand.

A cardboard coffee cup was in my right, gone cold because June had pushed it at me that morning and told me brides fainting was only romantic in films.

My veil kept brushing the painted skirting board.

My shoes pinched at both heels.

Behind the double doors, the organ was playing softly, warming up the room while two hundred guests waited for me to walk down the aisle.

I remember every small thing because the mind is cruel like that.

It keeps the polish on the floor and the smell of roses, even when the life around them is being torn apart.

Adrian Vale stood three feet away from me.

He looked beautifully dressed, perfectly shaved, and utterly absent.

His morning suit sat on him like something from a window display.

The buttonhole I had chosen for him was pinned slightly crooked, and part of me wanted to fix it even then.

That was how trained my love had become.

Even when his face told me something was wrong, some foolish part of me still wanted to straighten him.

His mother stood behind him in a cream suit with pearls at her throat.

Mrs Vale did not fidget.

She did not wring her hands or look embarrassed or pretend this was difficult.

She stood as if the corridor belonged to her, the chapel belonged to her, the guests belonged to her, and I was merely an administrative mistake that had finally been caught.

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