My mother-in-law poured something filthy over my wedding dress and left a note: “Know your place.” In front of 200 guests, I put it on anyway, took my father’s arm, and walked down the aisle without shedding a tear.

At the back of the chapel, the projection screen lowered. It had been prepared for a romantic childhood slideshow. Instead, the first image appeared: bank transfers, shell companies, signatures, dates.
Daniel stepped toward me. “Turn it off.”
Tessa said from the sound booth, “Touch her and I send the full file to every phone in this room.”
I faced the guests again.
“Daniel and Eleanor used Whitmore Foundation charity funds to pay personal debts, hide gambling losses, and bribe a zoning official for their new hotel project. They also planned to marry me into signing liability documents next week.”
Eleanor stood. “She’s lying.”
I clicked a small remote.
The screen changed to security footage from the bridal hallway.
Eleanor entered. Eleanor opened my closet. Eleanor poured the filth down my dress. Eleanor tucked the note into the lace.
The room erupted.

My mother-in-law ruined my wedding gown three hours before I was meant to marry her son. She poured black, rancid garbage water over the silk bodice, tucked a note into the lace, and wrote, “Know your place.”
The dress hung from the closet door like an injured ghost. Pearl buttons. Hand-stitched sleeves. My mother’s veil placed carefully beside it. The stain had spread across the front in a dark, hideous burst, dripping down onto the hardwood floor of the bridal suite. Dresses

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