So the lie had been rehearsed in person too.
My fingers moved faster now.
Did Camille know I was sent to Naples?
The typing dots appeared. Disappeared. Reappeared.
Not at first, Lena wrote. I don’t think so. But she definitely knew by the rehearsal dinner. I heard her and Ethan fighting behind the kitchen doors. She said, “This is psychotic.” He said, “It’s done now.”
The room around me narrowed. The edges of my desk, the lamp, the coffee mug with yesterday’s brown ring inside it—all of it seemed suddenly overlit, like truth had turned up the wattage.
Camille hadn’t started it.
But she had stayed.
There it was. The first real red herring of the whole mess clearing out of the water. I had spent two days wondering if my brother’s bride had engineered the prank because she wanted me erased from her fairy-tale weekend. Maybe she still wanted me gone. Maybe she enjoyed the result. But this, at least, suggested the rot had started where it usually did—with Ethan’s need to feel powerful and my mother’s appetite for letting him.
I called Lena.
She answered in a whisper. “Hi.”
“Are you somewhere you can talk?”
A door shut on her end. Then a rush of air. “Now I am.”
I sat at my desk with one hand gripping my own knee hard enough to hurt. “Tell me everything.”
And she did.
Not elegantly. Not like someone delivering a witness statement. More like a person emptying her pockets of something she hadn’t wanted to carry. She told me she’d heard my mother at the rehearsal dinner explaining my absence to Camille’s side of the family with a smile tight as a seam. She told me Ethan had laughed when one of his college friends asked whether I’d “bailed again.” She told me that during hair and makeup the morning of the wedding, Camille had gone quiet after checking her phone and asked twice whether anyone had spoken to me directly.
“She showed Ethan something on her screen,” Lena said. “I couldn’t see what. But he grabbed her wrist and took the phone. Not hard enough to leave a mark or anything. Just… controlling.”
The word landed with a sound in my body, like a lock engaging.
“Did anyone try to call me?” I asked.
“I don’t know. Camille disappeared for about twenty minutes before the ceremony. When she came back, her mascara had been redone.”
I looked down at my own hands. My nails were bitten ragged from Naples. I hadn’t even noticed.
“Why didn’t you tell me sooner?”