My Friend Dropped Me Three Days Before Her Wedding over My Haircut – The Other Bridesmaids Got Payback on My Behalf

34

My best friend wanted a picture-perfect, “magazine-worthy” wedding.

She controlled every detail, down to the bridesmaids’ eyelashes.

But three days before the big day, she dropped me, claiming my new haircut didn’t “fit” her vision. I was shattered, but no one saw what came next… not even her.

Camille and I met during freshman orientation at college. She was vibrant and outspoken, the kind of person who commanded attention without trying.

I was more reserved, but we balanced each other out.

“You have to be my bridesmaid someday,” she declared one night during our junior year, sprawled across my dorm room floor surrounded by textbooks.

“I’m going to have the most incredible wedding. Just wait.”

I laughed.

“I’ll be there with bells on.”

“No bells!” she corrected seriously. “Only WHAT I approve.

It has to be perfect.”

I should have recognized the warning signs back then.

Ten years later, when her boyfriend Jake proposed to her on a beach in Maui, I was the first person she called.

“Ava!” Her voice came through the phone, breathless with excitement.

“He did it! Jake proposed!”

“Oh my God, Camille! Congratulations!” I squealed, genuinely thrilled for her.

“I want you as one of my bridesmaids.

Please say yes!”

“Of course!

I wouldn’t miss it for the world.”

“Perfect! I already have a vision board started.

This wedding is going to be magazine-worthy.”

Over the next year, Camille’s “vision” became our collective burden. Each bridesmaid received a binder with expectations, schedules, and approved styles.

We needed three specific dresses for different events, shoes dyed to match precisely, and jewelry selected from an approved collection.

“The lavender looks a little different than in the catalog,” I mentioned during a fitting, pinching the excess fabric at my waist.

Camille’s eyes narrowed as she slipped on her shoes.

“It’s the lighting in here.

The dress is perfect. Just get it tailored.”

I nodded, swallowing my concerns about the additional cost.

Later that evening, the other bridesmaids and I gathered at Leah’s apartment to assemble favor boxes.

“I had to cancel my dental appointment to be here,” whispered Tara, carefully tying the ribbons. “She actually sent me a calendar invite with a mandatory attendance flag.”

…The story doesn’t end here, it continues on the next page 👇