He Chose Our Anniversary to Marry Her. I Chose to Arrive.-yumihong

Garrett let go of my wrist the second Lydia Monroe stepped between us and said — Mr.

Sullivan, you have been served.

If you touch my client again, I will amend the complaint before lunch.

Tessa snatched page seventeen before he could stop her.

She read the first paragraph, then the transfer authorization clipped behind it, and the sound that came out of her did not belong in a wedding.

It was part gasp, part scream, part realization.

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— Garrett, why is my name on a 180,000-dollar wire from March 14? she asked, voice cracking.

— Your divorce wasn’t final until July.

The church steps went dead quiet.

The quartet inside stopped in the middle of a hymn.

A groomsman looked at the pastor.

The pastor looked at the papers.

Patricia Sullivan moved forward with both hands raised, like she could physically smooth the air back into place.

— This is a misunderstanding, she said.

Julian, standing beside the open briefcase, answered before anyone else could.

— No, it isn’t.

Tessa kept flipping.

There was the lake condo deed in Patricia’s LLC.

The brokerage statement Garrett had hidden.

The shell-company income. Marcus Caldwell’s sworn affidavit.

The motion to reopen the divorce judgment.

The forensic summary prepared by Lydia’s firm.

Every lie had a date.

Every date had a document.

Every document had a signature.

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