Stephanie’s mother covered her mouth. Her father stood and stepped forward, then stopped halfway as if he didn’t know what to do.
My fiancée grabbed my arm, her fingers tight. “Turn that off!”
I left it up so that everyone could read it and let it sink in.
Stephanie’s mother covered her mouth.
“You don’t understand—” Stephanie started.
“Then explain it,” I said, finally turning to face her.
She opened her mouth, but didn’t know how to explain it away.
I glanced at the back of the room just in time to see Stephanie’s man turn and head straight for the exit, fast.
He didn’t look back.
Stephanie noticed too. Her eyes followed him, panic flashing across her face.
“You don’t understand—”
“I… I…” my fiancée stammered, turning back to me, her voice breaking as tears started forming.
The room felt heavy.
I walked past everyone, mic and remote still in my hand.
Right up to the gender reveal cake.
I picked up the knife and cut straight down the middle.
But the inside wasn’t pink or blue. It was both.
I stepped aside.
A few people leaned forward to see.
Then the murmurs started.
But the inside wasn’t pink or blue.
Inside the cake was an edible image.
Stephanie’s face, next to the one of the man who’d just bolted. I’d used the man’s profile picture from their chats for the image. In it, both of their heads were smiling.
It was framed in a bright red heart.
Below it, the message read:
“Congratulations! It’s a boy and a girl! A match made in heaven!”
Someone close by let out a sharp breath.
Another person muttered, “No way…”
Inside the cake was an edible image.
I switched the screen again.
The same image on the cake appeared above us, larger and impossible to miss.
Stephanie made a sound I hadn’t heard before, like something cracking.
I turned back to the mic.
“I’m calling off the engagement.”
The shock had some of the guests crying, especially those who’d believed Stephanie and thought we were a “forever after” type of couple.
Stephanie made a sound I hadn’t heard before.
Stephanie shook her head, tears running now. “Nick, please—”
I cut in, calmly.
“You can keep the engagement ring. It seems you and your man really need the cash.”
Some people shifted uncomfortably.
I looked around the room.
“Enjoy the food and drinks, everyone. I have some packing to do.”
No one laughed or clapped.
I set the mic down on the stand, then walked away and didn’t stop.
***
“I have some packing to do.”
The air outside felt freeing.
I stood there for a moment, letting everything settle.
My phone buzzed in my pocket. I didn’t check it.
***
Later that night, I started packing a bag for Stephanie.
Just the basics.
Clothes. Documents. A few things that mattered. I left the rest for later.
I didn’t check it.
I sat down on the bed afterward, and for the first time in a long time, I felt something clear.
Not anger.
Not even relief.
Just certainty.
I had walked into that room to expose a lie.
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