Groom Tore My Wedding Dress—Then My Solicitor Opened The File-heuh

The string quartet was still playing when my mother-in-law asked for the wedding safe.

Not politely.

Not as a joke.

Image

She simply held out one diamond-covered hand and said, “Give me the safe, Lily. Blake needs the money tonight.”

Two hundred guests sat beneath the chandeliers, their plates half-cleared, their champagne glasses catching the light.

The whole ballroom had that expensive hush hotels work so hard to create, all thick carpet, polished floor, stiff linen, and waiters who appeared without making a sound.

Beside the cake sat the steel wedding-gift safe.

It was full of cards, envelopes, cheques, pound notes, and little messages from people who had hugged me at the door and told me they hoped Evan and I would be happy.

Victoria Carter looked at it as if it had always been hers.

Blake, her younger son, sat at the family table with his tie loosened and his eyes fixed on the carpet.

He was thirty-two, old enough to know better, and still somehow treated like a boy who had got himself into a scrape.

His scrapes always seemed to involve money.

Gambling money.

Borrowed money.

Money promised to unpleasant people by midnight.

I turned to my husband.

Evan stood beside me in his dark wedding suit, jaw clenched, one hand flexing at his side.

Only an hour earlier, he had lifted my veil and told the room he would protect me for the rest of his life.

Now he would not meet my eyes.

“That money belongs to both of us,” I said. “It is not your family’s personal cashpoint.”

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *