
Bestie Wears My Wedding Dress at My Wedding, I Fake Death
Chapter 3
The wedding reception was a blur of white and gold, champagne flutes clinking against the backdrop of string quartet music. I watched from the shadows of the garden, my heart a hollow echo in my chest. The venue—my venue—was decorated exactly as I had planned, down to the cascading white roses that framed the entrance.
Only the bride had changed.
Chloe stood in the center of the room, wearing my dress—altered hastily to accommodate her smaller frame. The bodice pulled awkwardly across her chest, the hemline uneven where it had been taken up. But what caught my eye was the glittering diamond on her finger—my engagement ring, the one Julian had slipped onto my finger with promises of forever.
"Isn't it a beautiful ceremony?" a woman beside me whispered to her companion, mistaking me for another guest. "Though I heard the original bride ran off at the last minute."
"Poor thing," her friend replied. "But they say the best man and maid of honor have been in love for ages. Maybe it was meant to be."
I bit my lip until I tasted blood, forcing myself to remain still as Julian took Chloe's hand. His face—the face I had kissed goodbye just hours before—showed no grief, no shock at my disappearance. Instead, his eyes held something I recognized immediately: relief.
He was relieved that I was gone.
I snapped several photos with the camera Isabella had given me, capturing the moment when Julian slipped my ring onto Chloe's finger. The minister pronounced them husband and wife, and Julian kissed her with a passion he had never shown me.
"Got what you needed?" Isabella's voice came from behind me, her hand steady on my shoulder.
"Yes," I whispered, my voice surprisingly steady. "I've seen enough."
* * *
The white rose felt heavy in my hand as I stood before their door three days later. I had waited until evening, when the street would be quiet and shadows would hide my face.
I placed the flower on their doorstep, its petals still dewy from the florist's refrigerator. Beside it, I set a small cream-colored card—the same stationery I had chosen for my wedding invitations.
"From your loving memory," I had written in elegant script.
I melted into the shadows of the neighbor's hedge just as the front door opened. Chloe stood there, her face pale in the porch light. She looked down at the rose, then at the card.
Her hand trembled as she picked them up.
"Julian!" she called, her voice rising with panic. "Julian, come here!"
He appeared behind her, his expression annoyed at being disturbed. "What is it?"
Chloe thrust the card at him, her breathing becoming rapid and shallow. "She's watching us. She's still alive!"
"Don't be ridiculous," Julian snapped, but I could see the fear flickering in his eyes as he scanned the street. "Elara is dead. The police said she probably drowned."
"But this rose—" Chloe began, her voice breaking.
"It's probably just some sick prank," Julian said, though his knuckles were white around the card. "Throw it away."
I smiled in the darkness as Chloe's face crumpled in a full-blown panic attack, her body folding in on itself as she gasped for air.
* * *
The house was empty when I slipped inside the next morning. They had both left for work—Julian to his office at Thorne Industries, Chloe to her part-time job at an art gallery.
I moved through the rooms like a ghost, my footsteps silent on the hardwood floors. In our bedroom—no, their bedroom now—I paused, taking in the changes. My photographs had been removed from the walls, replaced with Chloe's artwork. The bedspread was different—a garish red instead of the soft blue we had chosen together.
I pulled a small bottle from my pocket and sprayed my signature perfume—the one Julian had always said reminded him of summer rain—into the air. The scent would linger for days, a haunting reminder of what they had stolen.
Next, I placed a framed photograph on Chloe's pillow—Julian and me at our engagement party, his arm around my waist, both of us laughing. I had written across the bottom: "Sleep well, dear friend."
Finally, I installed the tiny cameras Isabella had given me—one in the bedroom, one in the living room, one in the kitchen. Each no larger than a button, each capable of transmitting audio and video directly to my phone.
As I slipped out the back door, I felt a strange calm settle over me. The game had begun.
* * *
"Elara, I'd like you to meet my son, Damien."
Isabella's voice pulled me from my thoughts as we stood in the elegant dining room of her estate. A man rose from his seat at the table, his movements fluid and confident.
"Damien Thorne," he said, extending his hand. His eyes—a striking gray-blue—assessed me with cool intelligence.
"Elena Vargas," I replied, using my new name as I took his hand. His grip was firm, his palm warm against mine.
"Actually," Isabella interjected, "you may be interested to know that Damien is Julian Croft's direct supervisor at Thorne Industries."
I felt my pulse quicken as Damien's lips curved into a knowing smile.
"Is that right?" I asked, meeting his gaze steadily.
"Small world," he replied, his voice low and measured. "Mother mentioned you had some... experience with Mr. Croft."
Something electric passed between us—a current of understanding, of possibility.
"He's an ambitious man," Damien continued, gesturing for me to sit. "Perhaps too ambitious for his own good."
"And what about you, Mr. Thorne?" I asked as I took my seat. "Are you ambitious?"
His smile widened fractionally. "I prefer to call it strategic."
As dinner progressed, I found myself drawn to Damien's sharp intellect and dry wit. Unlike Julian's easy charm, Damien's appeal lay in his perceptiveness, his ability to see beneath surfaces.
"You know," he said as dessert was served, "I've been looking for a reason to reassess Julian's position at the company. His work has been... questionable lately."
"Has it?" I asked innocently.
"Very questionable," Damien confirmed, his eyes never leaving mine. "And I think you might be exactly the person to help me determine why."
The following weeks brought a new dynamic to my revenge. Damien became both ally and audience, fascinated by the calculated precision of my plans.
"Most people want justice," he observed one evening as we reviewed footage from the cameras in Julian's house. "You want something far more interesting."
"And what's that?" I asked.
"Balance," he replied simply. "You want the scales to tip exactly as far in your favor as they once did in theirs."
His corporate resources became mine—access to financial records, personnel files, security footage. With Damien's help, I began to build a comprehensive picture of Julian's professional life—and his vulnerabilities.
"Why are you helping me?" I asked him one night as we sat in his office, surrounded by documents.
Damien looked up from his computer, his expression unreadable. "Because you're the most fascinating person I've met in years," he said finally. "And because sometimes, the only way to truly see someone is to watch them fight for something they believe in."
His eyes held mine for a long moment. "Besides," he added with a slight smile, "I've always had a weakness for a good revenge story."
As his fingers traced the outline of my hand on the desk, I realized that my carefully constructed plan for vengeance had just become considerably more complicated—and infinitely more interesting.
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