“What happened?”
Elena told her everything.
Not with screaming. Not with dramatic pauses. She told it the way a surgeon might describe damage: cleanly, precisely, because if she let emotion take over, she might not survive the night.
When she finished, Mia whispered, “I’m going to kill him.”
“No,” Elena said. “You’re going to help me bury his version of the story before he tells it.”
There was a pause.
Then Mia said, “Tell me what you need.”
Elena took a breath.
“First, pull the prenup.”
“Elena…”
“Pull it.”
Mia was quiet for a second too long.
Elena’s eyes narrowed.
“What?”
“Elena, I didn’t want to bring this up before the wedding because you were happy.”
“What, Mia?”
“I never liked that prenup. I know you said Leonardo’s lawyer drafted it quickly because of his family assets, but the version you signed had some weird language.”
Elena sat straighter.
“What kind of language?”
“It protected his premarital assets aggressively, but it also had an infidelity clause that only applied if you cheated.”
Elena went still.
“Only me?”
The room seemed to shrink.
Leonardo had not just betrayed her.
He had prepared for it.
“Send it to me,” Elena said.
“Elena, are you safe?”
That question almost broke her.
“Yes,” she said. “Because he still thinks I don’t know.”
Mia exhaled.
“Then let’s make that his biggest mistake.”
By morning, Elena had a plan.
Not revenge. Not yet. Revenge was emotional, messy, easy to dismiss. Elena wanted something cleaner. She wanted the truth placed so carefully that Leonardo could not step around it without cutting himself.
At 7:30 a.m., Leonardo texted.
Hope you’re enjoying the spa, beautiful. Take time for yourself. I miss you already.
Elena stared at the message.
Beautiful.
Miss you.
Words from a man whose ex had worn her diamonds the night before.
She typed back:
Thank you. I think I needed this more than I realized.
The reply came almost instantly.
See? I know what’s good for you. Relax and stop overthinking.
Elena smiled without warmth.
He had no idea that sentence would someday make a lawyer laugh.
She spent the morning gathering records. The spa emailed the reservation confirmation. Leonardo had booked it six weeks before the wedding. Not four days into the honeymoon. Not as a sudden need for space. Six weeks before he stood in front of her father, cried during vows, and promised he could not wait to wake up beside her every day.
Three days away.
Prepaid.
Nonrefundable.
Scheduled exactly during the middle of their honeymoon.
Elena forwarded the email to Mia and saved it in three separate folders.
At noon, she called the villa resort and pretended to be cheerful.
“This is Elena Pierce,” she said. “My husband and I are in Villa Marisol. I think I left some jewelry in the safe, and I want to make sure housekeeping doesn’t touch anything.”
The concierge was warm and polished.
“Of course, Mrs. Pierce. Only registered guests have access to the villa. Is there a concern?”
Elena looked toward the ocean from her spa balcony.
“Actually, yes. Could you confirm who is listed as staying in the villa?”
There was typing.
“Mr. and Mrs. Leonardo Pierce.”
“No other guests?”
A pause.
“No, ma’am.”
“Interesting,” Elena said softly.
“Is something wrong?”
“I came back last night and saw a woman in my villa wearing my jewelry.”
Silence.
Then the concierge’s tone changed.
“Mrs. Pierce, would you like security to check the property?”
“No,” Elena said quickly. “Not yet. But I need the entry logs. All keycard access. All gate entries. Any security footage of visitors. Email them to me.”
“I’m not sure we can release—”
“I understand. Then preserve them. I’m making a formal report later today.”
The woman hesitated.
“Yes, ma’am. I’ll notify management.”
Elena hung up and felt her pulse in her throat.
She was not just a betrayed bride now.