His fingers traced my hand. “Hurry back, princess. The night’s still young.”
The gift table caught my eye as I walked past. Rows of elegantly wrapped presents stood like silent sentinels, reflecting the soft light. My sister-in-law Leah stood nearby, looking uncomfortable.
“Leah?” I called out, my voice soft with concern. “Everything okay?”
Her body trembled like a leaf caught in the autumn wind. Something was profoundly wrong. I could feel it in my bones.
“You look like you’ve seen a ghost,” I said softly, taking a step closer.
Her pregnant belly protruded at an odd angle, almost unnaturally rigid. As a sister-in-law who had been tracking her pregnancy for the past three months, something felt… different. Wrong. Impossibly wrong.
“Oh my God,” I muttered, my eyes narrowing, “your pregnancy bump looks so much bigger than I remember. And a bit odd. Everything okay?”
Leah’s hand instinctively moved to cover her stomach, her wedding ring catching the light. A nervous sweat broke out across her forehead, tiny droplets that spoke volumes of something I couldn’t quite pinpoint.
“Don’t touch,” she whispered as I approached closer.
My hand reached out anyway, curiosity burning brighter than caution. A sisterly gesture of connection and care. But something felt off the moment my fingers brushed her stomach.
It was unnaturally solid. Not the soft, fluid movement of a growing life, but something hard. Mechanical. Like a box was hidden beneath her dress.
Before I could process the sensation, gravity seemed to conspire. A wrapped present tumbled from beneath her dress, landing with a thud that cut through the wedding’s background music.
“WHAT THE HELL IS THIS?” I gasped, loud enough to make nearby guests turn.
Leah’s reaction was visceral. Her eyes, normally warm brown, turned frantic, darting left and right like a trapped animal seeking escape. Her hands flew out, trembling so violently I could see each finger quivering.
“Don’t open it, Selena. Please,” she begged. “You can’t… you shouldn’t see what’s inside.”
The crowd around us hushed with a collective intake of breath. Whispers began to flutter like nervous butterflies, rising and falling in a symphony of speculation.
“Why not?” I asked, my fingers already working the ribbon with anger and desperate curiosity.
Leah’s face went ashen. “Please,” she repeated, but this time it was a broken whisper. “Some secrets are meant to stay hidden. Don’t open it, Selena. Please… listen to me.”
But secrets have a way of breaking free, no matter how tightly they’re wrapped. And I was about to unwrap everything.
The ribbon fell away like a promise unraveling. My hands trembled as the lid opened. And my eyes widened in disbelief. There were several photographs. Of my husband. With another woman.
Not just casual proximity. Intimate moments captured in vivid, merciless color. Her hand on his shoulder. Their faces close, laughing. A sauna scene that looked like something between friends and lovers. Each glossy image felt like a knife twisting deeper into my soul.
“What. Are. These?” I cried.
The ballroom around us seemed to shrink.
Alan appeared suddenly, his cologne, the same one he’d worn when we first met, now smelling like betrayal. His color faded, leaving him looking ghostly.
“Selena,” he started, but the words caught in his throat like barbed wire.
I held up a photograph. The one where they were sitting impossibly close in a steamy sauna. “Explain. Now.”
His adam’s apple bobbed. Sweat beaded on his forehead. “It’s not—”
“NOT WHAT?” I interrupted. Several nearby guests turned, their conversations dying mid-sentence.
Leah stood frozen, her earlier panic transforming into a strange fusion of guilt and fear.
“These look pretty damn intimate,” I snarled, spreading the photographs across the gift table.
Alan’s hand reached out. “Please, not here—”
“HERE IS PERFECT! Explain to everyone how these photos aren’t what they look like.”
“I can explain,” Alan whispered. “It’s not what you think.”
The music halted. Champagne glasses stopped clinking. And our perfect world had just shattered.
The silence was deafening. Guests had formed a loose circle around us, their confused whispers creating a low, electric hum of anticipation.
“Start talking, Alan. Spit it out. I want every. Single. Detail.”
“Selena, stop. He’s innocent,” Leah chimed in.
Her hands twisted the fabric of her dress. Tears welled in her eyes, but something told me these weren’t just tears of fear. They were tears of frustration, of something gone terribly wrong.