At my wedding reception, I noticed my mother-in-law, Caroline, secretly drop something into my champagne when she thought no one was watching.
She expected me to drink it. Instead, I quietly switched glasses. When she lifted hers for a toast, I smiled.
That was when the real chaos began.
Her red lips curved into a faint smirk as she took a sip—but seconds later, her smile faltered.
Caroline’s face paled; her eyes widened in shock before the glass slipped from her trembling hand and shattered against the marble floor.
The music stopped. Three hundred guests froze.
“Mom!” Dylan shouted, rushing toward her.
I stayed still, suppressing the satisfaction threatening to show on my face.
Caroline tried to speak, but only a weak groan escaped her lips.
Feigning concern, I leaned close and muttered so only she could hear, “You should’ve chosen another day, because this one belongs to me.”
Her terrified eyes told me she understood everything—but it was already too late.
As staff rushed in, the hall erupted into chaos. The chandelier lights sparkled above, music still faintly playing, and amid the confusion, I felt a strange sense of calm.
When the paramedics arrived, I stepped back and examined my phone.
There it was the message Caroline had sent Dylan that morning.
I had read it earlier; I knew her passcode.
“Son, I’ll make sure you never make the mistake of marrying her. It’ll all be over before the night even begins.”
I forwarded the text to myself and to a journalist at Revista Central.
“Lori,” Dylan said, his face pale, “do you know what happened to my mom?”
I smiled sweetly. “Maybe she just reacted badly.
You know how sensitive your mother is to champagne.”
But when I saw Caroline’s fading eyes as she was carried out, I knew the truth: this was only the beginning of our wa:r.
Later, the music stopped completely.
The guests whispered, unsure what to do. Dylan turned to me, panic flashing in his eyes.
“Lori, what’s going on?
My mom wouldn’t collapse for no reason!”
I calmly set my glass down and got rid of my gloves.
“No, Dylan,” I said softly. “It wasn’t a coincidence.”
He looked bewildered.
I didn’t bother to explain.
Caroline hadn’t intended to k*ll me just to ruin me.
I’d explored the sedative in time. It would’ve knocked me unconscious, turned my wedding into a scandal, and left me as the perfect suspect.
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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