PART 1

“Mom, I cannot remain this man’s wife for even a single second longer.”
Katherine spoke these words while splayed across the plush carpet, her intricate lace wedding gown crumpled like discarded waste, her breath coming in ragged, shallow hitches, and her eyes wide with a terror that Grace had never once witnessed in a woman who had just hours ago promised her life to another.
Only an hour before this moment, the expansive gardens of the estate in Oakhaven Springs still held the lingering scent of gardenias, buttercream cake, and expensive bourbon.
Tiny golden lights strung between the ancient oak trees twinkled like fallen stars, the cousins were still bellowing with laughter near the carriage house, and the final guests had just departed, offering high praise to the family for hosting such a flawless, picture perfect wedding.
Grace had spent years anticipating this specific day.
Caleb was her only son, her absolute pride and joy, the brilliant young man who had excelled in civil engineering on a full academic scholarship, who had secured a prestigious position at a major infrastructure firm in the suburbs of Richmond, and who had always carried himself with a serious, hardworking, and deeply respectful demeanor.
When he had first brought Katherine home to meet the family two years earlier, Grace felt deep in her heart that the universe was finally blessing her with the daughter she had never managed to have.
Katherine had not arrived at the house trying to impress anyone with grand gestures.
She arrived wearing a simple cotton blouse, a shy and genuine smile, and hands that were instantly ready to assist with whatever chores were at hand.
While her judgmental sisters in law whispered biting opinions about Katherine’s modest background, the young woman simply rolled up her sleeves and began washing the dinner dishes without being asked.
From that very first day, Grace began setting aside special pastries for her during trips to the bakery, preparing her famous slow cooked brisket on Sundays, and calling her “sweetheart” without even realizing the habit had formed.
That was precisely why, when she heard the piercing scream shatter the stillness of the night, her heart completely stopped in her chest.
The scream originated from the primary bedroom shared by the newlyweds.
It was not a typical sound of playful fright or minor surprise; it was a jagged, desperate shriek, as if someone were drowning in the open air and gasping for their last breath.
Robert, her husband, sat bolt upright in their bed, his face pale with sudden alarm.
“Did you hear that sound?” he asked, his voice thick with sleep and confusion.
Grace was already on her feet, her slippers forgotten on the floor.
“That was Katherine, I am sure of it,” she replied, her heart hammering against her ribs.
She sprinted barefoot down the long hallway, nearly tripping over her own dressing gown in her rush.
Her brother in law, Frank, who had stayed the night to help with the wedding cleanup, was already coming up the staircase with a face as white as a sheet.
“What in the world is happening up here?” Frank shouted, his voice echoing in the quiet house.
Grace did not bother to answer him as she reached the heavy oak door.
She began pounding on the wood with both of her hands, her knuckles aching with the force of the impact.
“Caleb! Katherine! Please open this door right now!” she pleaded, but no sound came from the other side of the threshold.
She hit the wood again, this time with even more desperation.
“Son, I am telling you to open the door this instant!” she commanded, but the room remained hauntingly silent, devoid of footsteps, sobbing, or any attempt at an explanation.
Robert finally pushed his wife gently aside and threw his full weight against the locked door, forcing the mechanism to give way with a loud crack of splintering timber.
The scene that greeted them did not look like the aftermath of a beautiful wedding night.
The bed remained perfectly undisturbed, with the decorative silk petals still neatly arranged across the pristine sheets.
The expensive crystal champagne flutes sat untouched on the side table, their contents completely forgotten.
Katherine was huddled tightly against the far wall, clutching her chest with both hands and trembling as if she had just managed to narrowly escape from a violent predator.
Caleb was sitting on the floor on the opposite side of the room, his white dress shirt completely unbuttoned, his face soaked in a cold, oily sweat, and his eyes staring blankly at nothing, looking entirely lost.
Grace rushed forward and knelt on the cold floor beside Katherine, pulling the girl into a protective embrace.
“My dear, please tell me what has happened here, tell me everything,” she urged, her voice trembling.
Katherine flinched and pushed herself further away, her eyes wild with genuine panic.
“Do not come near me, please, just stay away from me,” she begged, her voice cracking under the strain.
“It is me, Katherine, I am your mother in this house, you are safe with me,” Grace insisted, trying to soothe the girl.
Katherine looked up at her, her lips cracked and raw from her incessant trembling.
“Mom, I cannot be his wife anymore, this man, this man sitting here, he absolutely hates me,” she whispered, the words hitting the room like a heavy stone.
The silence that followed felt suffocating, as if the very oxygen had been drained from the space.
Robert turned his gaze toward his son, his expression hardening into one of intense confusion and anger.
“Caleb, look at me and explain what in God’s name you did to her,” he demanded.
Caleb opened his mouth, but no coherent words emerged from his throat.
He simply began to sob, not like a grown man grappling with a complex problem, but like a small child trapped in a lie that had finally grown too large for him to contain.
“It was not supposed to happen this way,” he finally murmured, wiping his eyes with his sleeve.
“I honestly did not think she would scream like that,” he added, his voice hollow.
Grace felt her blood run cold, her stomach turning at the admission.
“What do you mean it was not on purpose?” she asked, her voice dangerously quiet.
Caleb covered his face with his hands, his shoulders shaking with the force of his breakdown.
“I just wanted to see if I could make her feel fear,” he confessed, the cruelty of his own words seemingly surprising even him.
Katherine let out a sharp, jagged sob at his statement, and Frank immediately stepped forward, offering to lead her to the privacy of the guest quarters.
Robert helped her to her feet, his expression grim as he guided her out of the room.
She walked away without glancing back at her husband, her expensive wedding dress dragging behind her on the floor like a tattered shroud.
Grace remained standing directly in front of her son, her maternal love warring with the absolute horror of what she was hearing.
“Caleb, look at me right in the eyes,” she commanded.
He refused to lift his head, his chin tucked firmly against his chest.
“Mom, please, just do not ask me anything else tonight,” he begged.
“I am asking you to speak right now,” she insisted, refusing to back down.
Caleb swallowed hard, his throat working convulsively as he finally looked up, his eyes bloodshot and filled with a confusing mixture of raw anger and deep, self loathing shame.
“She had to pay for it,” he said, his voice dropping to a dangerous, low register.
Grace felt as though the floor beneath her was shifting, the world she thought she knew slipping through her fingers.
“Pay for what, Caleb? What on earth are you talking about?” she demanded.
Caleb shifted his gaze toward the door through which Katherine had been taken, and he spoke with a chilling, clinical coldness that Grace had never heard from him before.
“She had to pay for what she did to Beatrice,” he said, his voice devoid of warmth.
In that singular moment, Grace finally realized that her son’s wedding had never been a joyous celebration at all.
It had been a meticulously constructed trap, built with flowers, music, laughter, and false blessings.
And she knew, with a sinking dread, that the worst was surely yet to come.
PART 2
Not a single soul managed to sleep for even a moment during that long, harrowing morning.
The house, which just hours earlier had been vibrant with the sounds of a live jazz band, laughter, and the clinking of glasses, was now as silent as a tomb.
The tables were still impeccably set in the garden, the remnants of the feast serving as a reminder of the night’s deception.
The large decorative sign bearing the names of Caleb and Katherine still hung at a crooked angle by the main entrance.
In the living room, Grace sat staring at a professional photograph of the newlyweds beaming in front of the altar, and she felt as though the image belonged to an entirely different, happier life that had been erased.
At four o’clock in the morning, the heavy door to the guest suite creaked open.
Katherine appeared, her bridal veil discarded somewhere in the dark, her makeup smeared across her cheeks, and her dress still clinging to her thin frame.
She walked directly toward Grace, and before the older woman could utter a single syllable, Katherine knelt down at her feet.
“Please, you must forgive me,” Katherine said, her voice small and broken.
Grace felt a wave of maternal panic surge through her.
“Forgive you for what, my dear? Please, stand up and come sit with me,” she implored, reaching down to help the girl.
Katherine shook her head vigorously, refusing to rise from the floor.
“Forgive me because I knew that Caleb had once been in love with another woman,” she admitted, her voice trembling.
“But I did not know that he had married me specifically to punish me for her absence,” she added.
Grace eventually helped her up and led her into the kitchen, where she poured her a glass of water with trembling hands.
“Tell me everything, leave nothing out,” Grace urged, her voice soft but firm.
Katherine took a deep, shuddering breath before she began to speak.
“When we finally walked into our bedroom, he was acting completely strange and distant,” she started.
“At first, he spoke to me nicely enough, asking if I wanted anything to drink, and he locked the door behind us,” she continued.
“But then his entire demeanor shifted, and he looked at me with such venom that I felt like a complete stranger, like an enemy,” she explained.
“He told me that that night I was finally going to understand exactly what it meant to have my life completely destroyed by someone else,” she added, her eyes watering again.
Grace closed her eyes, trying to block out the image of her son being capable of such malice.