
His Lies Led to Tragedy
Chapter 1
The morning light filtered through the gauzy curtains of my bedroom, casting a dreamlike glow across the antique wedding dress I'd carefully preserved for this moment. My grandmother's heirloom - ivory lace with pearl beading that caught the light as I turned before the mirror. Today wasn't officially my wedding day, but in my heart, it might as well have been.
Brandon's company was going public today. After five years of promises - "when the startup takes off," "when we secure the next round of funding," "when we finally go public" - today was the day all those conditional futures would become our present.
My fingers trembled slightly as I smoothed the delicate fabric. The dress fit perfectly, as if it had been waiting for this moment as long as I had. I reached for the pale blue stationery on my vanity, the vows I'd written and rewritten until every word felt right.
"Brandon," I whispered to my reflection, "today I promise to continue being your rock, your harbor in every storm..." My voice caught. How many late nights had I spent editing his presentations? How many investor dinners had I hosted, smiling through exhaustion? How many times had I pushed my own marketing career aside because his dreams needed to come first?
All worth it. All leading to this moment.
I carefully changed out of the dress, placing it in a garment bag. The surprise I'd planned was months in the making - I would appear at his office after the closing bell, when the IPO was official. With a small cake I'd ordered from his favorite bakery and a bouquet of white peonies, I would finally claim the future we'd both been working toward.
The drive to his office building in downtown San Francisco felt surreal. Each stoplight seemed to pulse with possibility. My heart hammered against my ribs as I parked, checking my reflection one last time. Perfect. Professional on the outside - Brandon always appreciated how I "looked the part" of a tech entrepreneur's partner - but underneath, the secret knowledge of the wedding dress waiting in my car.
"You can do this," I whispered to myself, gathering the cake box and flowers. "This is your day too."
The glass and steel building loomed above me, housing dozens of startups and tech companies, including Brandon's rapidly growing enterprise. I nodded confidently to the receptionist, who knew me well enough not to question my presence, even on this most important of days.
"He's in his office," she said with a smile that didn't quite reach her eyes. Something in her expression made my stomach tighten, but I pushed the feeling away. Nothing would ruin today.
The elevator ride to the 32nd floor gave me a moment to steady my breathing. I'd supported Brandon through every failure, every setback. I'd been the one holding his hand when the first prototype failed, the one who stayed up all night helping him rebuild his pitch deck when investors pulled out. Today was the culmination of our shared sacrifice.
I stepped out of the elevator, nodding to familiar faces as I made my way toward Brandon's corner office. His assistant's desk was empty - unusual for Emma, who prided herself on efficiency. As I approached Brandon's door, I heard voices from within - his deep, confident tone and a lighter, feminine laugh I recognized as Emma's.
I balanced the cake box in one arm, reaching for the door handle with the other, when their words suddenly became clear through the not-quite-closed door.
"Kenya during migration season will be incredible," Brandon was saying, his voice warm with excitement. "I've booked the private villa overlooking the Mara River. We'll have a perfect view of the wildebeest crossing."
"I can't believe we're finally doing this," Emma replied, her voice intimate in a way that made my blood run cold. "Your bucket list is getting shorter by the month."
"Speaking of which," Brandon said, "I need to figure out how to postpone the wedding thing again. Rachel's been patient, but..."
My fingers went numb. The cake box slipped slightly, and I clutched it tighter, pushing the door open with my shoulder.
They didn't notice me at first. Brandon was leaning against his desk, a manila folder open between them. Emma stood close - too close - her hand resting casually on his arm. The folder was labeled in Brandon's precise handwriting: "Bucket List."
As I stood frozen in the doorway, my eyes locked on the contents of that folder: itineraries, hotel confirmations, photographs of Brandon and Emma at a vineyard in Tuscany, on a beach in Bali, outside a ryokan in Kyoto - all places he'd told me he'd visited for "critical investor meetings" or "industry conferences."
All the business trips that had delayed our wedding. All the late nights he couldn't come home. All neatly documented in a folder that proved every promise he'd ever made me was a lie.
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