He Wanted Her Farm at His Wedding. Her Phone Call Ended His Smile-Teptep

The slap cracked across the ballroom so cleanly that even the string quartet lost its place.

For half a second, the only sound was the tiny scrape of a bow against a violin string.

Then came the crash of sugar glass.

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Margaret Hart hit the wedding cake shoulder-first, and the whole front table buckled under her weight.

Buttercream smeared across her cheek.

White roses made of frosting broke against the polished floor.

A tier slid sideways, slow and obscene, like the room itself needed time to understand what had just happened.

Three hundred wedding guests stared.

Nobody reached her first.

That was the part Margaret would remember later more clearly than the sting across her face.

Not the slap.

Not the cake.

The pause.

The terrible little pause where everyone measured the cost of helping her.

Damon Vale stood over her in his white tuxedo, breathing hard, his hand still hanging in the air as if he had not yet decided whether to lower it.

He looked handsome in the way expensive men train themselves to look handsome.

Perfect hair.

Perfect cuffs.

Perfect smile.

But the smile had twisted now.

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