I had always loved weddings, the lights, the laughter, the careful orchestration of joy. As an event manager, I thrived in the chaos that came with them. The spreadsheets, the floral arrangements, the last-minute crises, all of it felt like a symphony that only I could conduct.
So when a woman named Veronica Calloway contacted me to plan what she called “the most exquisite wedding our city has ever seen,” I thought it was just another challenge. Another opportunity to prove that I was one of the best. Veronica was the kind of woman whose presence filled a room before she even entered it.
Wealthy, elegant, and meticulously put together, she had that commanding aura that made people stand a little straighter when she spoke. From our first meeting, she made it clear that this wasn’t just a wedding, it was a statement. Every detail had to scream sophistication, class, and wealth.
“I want people to remember this day for the rest of their lives,” she said during our consultation, her red lips curving into a smile that didn’t quite reach her eyes. “And I trust you’ll make that happen, Marissa.”
I nodded, scribbling notes, unaware that this wedding would soon become the most hauntingly personal event of my career. For three months, I poured my heart into the planning.
Veronica’s vision was elaborate: a ballroom at the Grand Solara Hotel, cascading orchids, gold accents, live orchestra, imported Italian menu—the works. Her budget was practically limitless, which gave me both creative freedom and crushing pressure. She’d occasionally bring up her fiancé, though never in much detail.
“He’s quite private,” she’d say vaguely. “You’ll meet him soon enough.”
I didn’t think much of it. Some grooms preferred to stay out of the chaos of wedding planning, and I’d worked with plenty of them before.
Meanwhile, my own life wasn’t exactly perfect. My husband, David, had been distant for months. We’d been married for six years, and though we once shared everything, dreams, laughter, late-night talks, lately, our conversations had grown shorter, more perfunctory.
He’d started traveling more often for “business,” sometimes leaving for days without much explanation. I tried not to think too deeply about it. After all, marriages had seasons, right?
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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