“You did it all, babe. From the contracts to the paperwork.”
The room froze. Forks stopped mid-air, glasses hovered. And Catherine leaned forward, squinting at the screen as her hand went to her chest.
“What is this?!” Jake demanded.
“This,” I said calmly. “Is the wedding you planned. Just with your mistress, not me.”
Gasps rippled through the room. Maya stepped forward and placed a small stack of printed screenshots in the center of the table.
“… just with your mistress, not me.”
“In case anyone needs context,” she said.
Catherine flipped through the pages, her face blanching with every swipe.
“Jake,” she said in a cracked voice. “Tell me this isn’t real.”
“We didn’t know how to tell Tamara,” he said quickly, eyes darting. “Things changed. It got complicated. We —”
“So instead of just ending things with me respectfully,” I said. “You let me plan your wedding with her?”
“Tell me this isn’t real.”
“We didn’t want to hurt you, Tam,” Maddie said, standing up. “You’re so sensitive. We thought if we waited… told you after…”
“After what? After I handed you my wedding on a silver tray? Do you know how much of my savings went into that wedding?”
“You don’t own Jake, Tamara,” Maddie said, her eyes sharp. “You don’t own the barn. Or the date. You own nothing.”
My dad stood so fast his chair clattered behind him.
“You don’t own Jake, Tamara.”
“And Jake doesn’t own my daughter. Both of you, you’re disgusting. Get out.”
Jake’s mouth opened, but no sound came.
“You’re making a scene,” he finally muttered.
“You haven’t seen anything yet,” I said with a smile.
What no one at the table knew yet was that I had already called the venue.
“Both of you, you’re disgusting.”
Emily had answered, and I told her everything — from the texts, to the contract, to the months of deception I’d just uncovered. Her silence on the other end wasn’t shock, just sadness.
Like she’d known. Like she’d been waiting.
“I’m so sorry,” she said. “Whatever you need, we’ll make it right. I promise, Tamara.”
The manager agreed to reclassify the event under my name. He removed all mentions of “wedding” from the booking. Jake and Maddie were erased from the file.
“I’m so sorry,” she said.
The deposit stayed — the venue’s policy, not mine.
So at the rehearsal dinner, I ended my little toast with one final line:
“Tomorrow’s event is still on. Same time, same place. But it’s not a wedding anymore — it’s a celebration of the truth.”