Groom Canceled The Wedding Onstage — Then The Clause He Mocked Took Everything Back-thuyhien

Brandon leaned over the prenup like the paper had suddenly changed languages.

For three seconds, the ballroom only moved in small sounds: the soft clink of ice in a champagne glass, the restless scrape of a chair leg, the faint hum of the microphone still live in the officiant’s hand. My attorney’s finger stayed on page seven. The silver cake knife beside the folder reflected Brandon’s face in a warped strip of metal.

His hand remained frozen around the handle.

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Diane was the first to recover. She stepped forward in her ivory mother-of-the-groom dress, pearls tight against her throat, tissue still pressed between two red nails.

“This is absurd,” she said, but her voice had lost its church softness.

My attorney, Marlene Price, did not look at her.

“Mr. Hale signed voluntarily on April 18 at 7:42 p.m. The agreement was witnessed by counsel for both sides. He also initialed the clause in question. Twice.”

Brandon straightened. The smile he had worn for 186 guests had gone thin and uneven.

“Emily slipped that in.”

Marlene turned one page without hurry. The paper made a dry sound against the linen-covered gift table.

“Your counsel received the revised draft twenty-six minutes before signature. He asked whether you wanted time to review it. You said, and I quote, ‘I know what I’m signing.’”

A low murmur rolled across the ballroom.

The orchids still smelled sweet. Too sweet. The vanilla cake sat untouched behind Brandon’s elbow, perfect white tiers stacked under gold ribbon, while the string quartet lowered their bows one by one. Near the back, someone’s phone camera caught the light.

Brandon looked past Marlene to me.

“Tell her to stop.”

I stood beside my father with my bouquet hanging at my side. White roses, cool stems, ribbon damp where my fingers had tightened around it. My veil scratched at the side of my jaw each time I breathed.

I did not answer him.

Diane moved closer, keeping her voice low enough to sound refined but high enough for the front row to hear.

“Emily, darling, don’t embarrass yourself further. Weddings are emotional. Men say things.”

That was when the hotel manager set the vendor ledger on the table.

The leather book landed with a weight that made the cake knife jump.

“Final verified wedding expenses,” Marlene said. “Venue deposit. Catering. Flowers. Band. Photography. Security. Lodging blocks. Cancellation penalties. Current total: $173,840.”

Brandon blinked.

Diane’s tissue lowered from her face.

“That cannot be right,” she said.

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