Then, at a little after nine in the morning, it happened. A scream, shrill, piercing, unlike anything I’d ever heard from her, ripped through the house. Cups clattered, people froze, and my heart seized in my chest.
I ran upstairs faster than I thought my old legs could carry me. Lily’s bedroom door was wide open, and inside, my granddaughter was collapsed on the floor, her hands gripping the ruined remains of the wedding dress I had poured myself into for months.
The gown was shredded. The satin skirt was slashed in jagged lines from waist to hem. The lace sleeves hung in tatters. Pearls I had sewn on individually were scattered across the carpet like drops of milk.
It looked as though someone had attacked it with a blade, deliberate and merciless. Lily was sobbing so hard she could barely breathe. “Grandma, who would do this? Why?”
I sank to my knees beside her, my heart in pieces. For a moment, all I could do was stroke her hair and whisper soothing words, though I felt anything but calm.
Rage, sorrow, disbelief, they all churned inside me at once. Who could be so cruel as to destroy a bride’s gown just hours before her wedding?
The family erupted into chaos. Lily’s mother, Anne, accused the caterers of mishandling things. Her father suspected a jealous cousin. The bridesmaids whispered theories. But I knew, as I looked at the clean, sharp slashes in that fabric, that this wasn’t an accident. Someone wanted to stop this wedding.
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