“Still Pretending Your Little Marine Job Matters, Morgan?” My Sister Sneered At Her Own Perfect Wedding. She Had No Idea The Joke Was On Her. “What Are You Doing, Morgan?!”

 

Part 1

The scream cut the music in half.

One second the ballroom was all candlelight and string music and expensive laughter. The next, a champagne flute slipped from somebody’s hand, hit the marble, and burst like a gunshot. People jerked around so fast their chairs scraped backward in a ragged chorus. White roses shook in their crystal vases. A violin squealed and went dead.

Avery turned toward me in the middle of the dance floor, one hand clutching the skirt of her gown, the other braced against a chair she’d almost knocked over. Her veil dragged through broken glass. Mascara was already starting to blur under one eye.

“Morgan,” she shouted, her voice sharp enough to draw every head in the room, “what have you done?”

I didn’t answer.

I stood at the edge of the floor with both feet planted and my fingers resting lightly against the silver dog tag at my throat. The air smelled like gardenias, spilled champagne, hot stage lights, and panic. Somewhere behind the ballroom doors, boots pounded over stone.

Then the side entrance flew open.