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The Livestream That Ended Her Wedding Vows Novel Cover

The Livestream That Ended Her Wedding Vows

Mira Calloway mortgaged her apartment to launch a wedding planning company, and her first client was herself—planning her own wedding to fiancé Damon Vance. When the livestream camera pushed in toward the cracked-open door of the bridal suite, three thousand connected guests, along with the bride herself, heard the groom tell a bridesmaid: "I'll handle it tonight and divorce her." She didn't cry. She didn't storm out. She simply smiled at the sign-in table, slipped off her wedding ring, and left it for him. Three months later, he knelt in the rain outside her company's front door. She walked past him with a coffee in her hand, like she didn't know him at all.
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Chapter 4

The ballroom was empty.

I wasn't there. I was in a vinyl booth six blocks away, watching it through Lacey's phone — she'd sent me a thirty-second clip from a busser she'd tipped twenty bucks.

Damon stood alone at the sign-in podium.

He flipped the guest book. Page one. Page two. Three names in three inks. He kept going. Blank cream pages, one after another, his thumb working faster, the pages snapping.

He got to the back.

He turned it over.

His shoulders went still.

The marker line was right there. *Damon Vance, you don't have to deal with me tonight. Mira Calloway.* The ring sat on top of the period.

His hand came up. It was shaking. I could see the shake from a phone screen, through a busser's pocket, through six blocks of rain.

He picked up the ring.

The clip ended.

"Mira."

I looked up. Lacey was across the booth from me, mascara smeared into her temples, holding a coffee she hadn't touched.

"I'm here."

"You're not. You're staring at the table."

"I'm here."

I slid the phone back to her. The waitress walked past with a pot. I shook my head.

"The dress." Lacey nudged her gym bag with her sneaker. "I'll drop it at the cleaner on Tremont. There's a consignment site, Once-Worn, they take ivory crepe—"

"Tomorrow morning. Online by Monday."

"Mira, you don't have to — your mom would buy that dress back from you in a second—"

"Online by Monday."

She closed her mouth.

I tugged the sleeves of the hoodie she'd brought me down over my hands. Generic gray. The jeans were a size too big. I'd never been so grateful for ugly clothes.

"Lacey. I need a favor."

"Anything."

"Calloway Events did Damon's company year-end party. February. We did their April investor mixer. We did the June retreat at the Cape."

"Yeah."

"The hotels run access logs. Key card swipes. Every entrance, every elevator, every floor." I picked up my pen, clicked it. "Pull six months. Every event we ran for his company. I want every swipe under his name and every swipe under Sienna Park's."

Lacey blinked. "How am I—"

"You dated the AV manager at the Mandarin until March. He has a friend at the Langham. The Langham has a sister property at the Cape. Make calls."

"Mira." Her voice dropped. "You think this didn't start today."

"I know it didn't start today."

"How."

"He used a register on her in that hallway he's used on me for two years. You don't get to that register in an afternoon."

She wiped under her eye with the side of her thumb. "Okay."

"This week. Not next."

"This week."

"Thank you."

The waitress dropped a check we hadn't asked for. I slid it under my elbow.

Lacey watched me pull the folder out of her gym bag — the one she'd grabbed from my apartment on her way over, the one I'd told her was on the kitchen counter under the fruit bowl.

The bank's logo. The loan extension paperwork.

I uncapped the pen.

"Mira—"

"Don't."

"That was supposed to get paid off Monday."

"Plans changed."

"Damon's wire—"

"Isn't coming." I signed the first page. "Was never mine. Was a gift contingent on a wedding."

"You're going to carry two-forty by yourself."

"I'm going to carry two-forty by myself."

I signed the second page. The third. Initialed the boxes. The pen scratched. The booth's vinyl squeaked under me every time I shifted my hip.

Lacey's face did the thing it does right before she cries in front of a client.

"Mira. Do you want to call your parents."

I capped the pen.

I sat with the question.

My mother. My father. My mother who had cried at the dress fitting. My father who had practiced his walk down the aisle in the kitchen in his socks. My mother who would, the second she heard, get in a car. My father who would, the second he heard, get on a phone with Damon and lose ten years off his heart.

My grandmother, eighty-six pounds, watching me leave a room in a wedding dress and then watching the room go empty.

"No."

"Mira—"

"If I call them now, my mother is on I-90 inside of an hour. My father calls Damon. My father has a stent, Lacey. He has a stent."

"Okay."

"They'll fall apart. Then I have to hold them up. Then I don't get to fall apart at all, ever, because the only window I have is the one before they know."

"So when."

"After Monday. After I sit with Hale. After I have something to tell them other than *he was sleeping with my maid of honor and I left.*"

"What do you tell them then."

"I tell them I'm filing." I slid the loan papers back into the folder. "And I tell them what I'm filing with."

My phone buzzed on the table. Unknown number. I let it go to voicemail. It rang again. Same number.

I picked up.

"Calloway."

"This is Hale. Returning."

I sat up an inch.

"Mr. Hale."

"You called this morning. I had a deposition. Apologies."

"Monday. Ten a.m. Your office."

"I have eleven."

"Ten."

A small pause. "Ten."

The waitress refilled the cup at the next booth. The espresso machine hissed. Lacey was watching me like I was somebody she'd just met.

"Mr. Hale. Before Monday."

"Yes."

"I'm not calling you because my husband cheated on me. I'm calling you because I'm about to become the most expensive problem on his balance sheet, and I want the lawyer who knows how to make that happen."

The line went quiet.

I counted. One. Two. Three. Four.

"Ten a.m.," he said. "Bring everything."

"I will."

I hung up.

Lacey's mouth was open.

"Don't," I said.

"I didn't say anything."

"You were about to."

"I was about to say that's the coldest sentence I've ever heard you say."

"Good."

I pushed the folder into her bag. I stood. The hoodie sleeve rode up. I tugged it back down.

"Cleaner. Consignment. Access logs."

"Cleaner. Consignment. Access logs."

"I'll text you tonight."

"Mira." She caught my wrist. "Eat something."

"Tomorrow."

I left a twenty on the check and pushed the door open with my shoulder.

The rain had stopped. The street smelled like wet asphalt and the bakery two doors down. I stepped off the curb and looked up because the light at the corner had changed and a bus was coming.

The bus stop across the street had a digital ad panel above the bench.

It was running the noon news ticker.

LOCAL TRENDING — and then a still frame, grainy, pulled from a livestream. A cream-papered hallway. A door cracked open. Ten centimeters of dark.

My door.

The ticker rolled.

Second story.

VANCE CAPITAL — EMERGENCY BOARD STATEMENT ISSUED 2:47 PM.

I stopped in the middle of the crosswalk.

The wedding had collapsed at one fifteen.

It was three twelve.

Damon's company had pushed an emergency board statement in the ninety-two minutes it took me to change clothes and sign a loan extension.

The bus blew its horn.

I didn't move.

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