Her Brother Attacked Her Before the Wedding, But She Had Already Called Help-paupau

The knife went in before the string quartet reached the chorus.

For one second, Eleanor Carter did not understand what had happened.

The bridal suite still looked perfect.

Image

Chandelier light warmed the mirrors.

Ivory roses filled the marble vanity.

The air smelled like champagne, hairspray, white gardenia perfume, and candle wax.

Her veil brushed the floor behind her, cold and soft, while wedding music floated up from downstairs like the world had no idea anything was wrong.

Then Eleanor looked down.

Her brother Bradley’s hand was wrapped around the silver handle of the ceremonial cake knife.

His face did not look horrified.

It looked angry.

As if she had embarrassed him by bleeding.

Margaret Carter stood by the door with one hand on the brass knob and pearls shining at her throat.

She was the kind of woman who could cry at a charity luncheon on cue, then fix her lipstick before anyone saw the stain on her napkin.

But she did not cry when her daughter folded toward the floor.

She looked toward the hallway.

“Stay quiet,” she whispered. “Guests must not know.”

That was when Eleanor understood that the room had not suddenly become cruel.

It had simply stopped pretending.

Her whole childhood had trained her for this kind of silence.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.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