I kept my eyes on the screen, forcing myself not to look away. Derek’s fingers tapped once. Something pale dropped into the champagne. Then he slipped the packet away and raised his own glass as though nothing had happened.
A minute later, the video showed me switching the drinks.
Officer Grant paused the footage. “You knowingly gave him the contaminated drink?”
“No,” I said carefully. “I moved my glass away from myself. I didn’t know what he put in it. I didn’t know if it was dangerous. I only knew he had put something in mine.”
“That distinction matters,” Daniel said.
Officer Grant looked at him. “It does.”
She collected both glasses as evidence. The hotel security team found the nearest hallway camera angle. It showed Derek entering the men’s restroom ten minutes before the toast and speaking with Vanessa outside the door afterward. Vanessa passed him something small from her clutch.
When Officer Grant questioned Vanessa about it, we could hear her crying through the wall.
“I don’t know what you mean,” she kept saying. “It was breath mints. It was just breath mints.”
But breath mints did not make a man collapse.
By midnight, the wedding was over.
Not finished. Over.
Guests were sent home with half-eaten cake and rumors thick enough to choke on. My parents left without speaking to me. Daniel and I did not go to our hotel suite overlooking the river. Instead, we spent the first night of our marriage in a police station, giving statements beneath fluorescent lights.
At 3:12 in the morning, Officer Grant came back with an update.
“Your brother is stable,” she said.
I felt Daniel exhale beside me.
I had not realized he had been holding his breath.
“He ingested a strong sedative mixed with alcohol,” Officer Grant continued. “Potentially dangerous, especially with the dose and his body weight, but not fatal based on what we know now. Toxicology will confirm.”
“A sedative,” I repeated.
Officer Grant nodded. “Fast-acting. Disorienting. Could cause memory gaps.”
Daniel’s expression darkened. “Why would he want Mara sedated at her own wedding?”
I already knew.
The answer sat heavy in my stomach like a stone.
Officer Grant looked at me. “Mrs. Hayes, do you have any idea what his motive might have been?”
Mrs. Hayes.
For one tiny second, the name startled me.
Then I remembered. I had married Daniel. Despite Derek. Despite my parents. Despite every person who thought my life belonged to them to control.
“Yes,” I said. “Money.”
The room fell silent.
I told them about my grandmother, Evelyn Caldwell. She had raised me more than my parents ever had. When she died two years earlier, she left me forty percent ownership in Caldwell Urban Properties, the family real estate company. Derek received twenty percent. My father controlled the rest.Family
The company had been quietly struggling for years. Derek had made reckless investments, covered them with even worse loans, and expected my father to repair everything. But my shares gave me voting power. Enough to stop a merger Derek desperately needed.
A merger with Whitestone Development.
A merger I had planned to vote against the following Tuesday.
Daniel had helped me study the documents. Buried inside the paperwork were clauses that would have forced minority shareholders to sell at a discounted value after restructuring. Put simply, Derek and my father would profit immediately, while I would lose most of what my grandmother had left me.
I refused to sign.
That was when Derek began calling me selfish.
Then unstable.
Then ungrateful.
A week before the wedding, my mother invited me to lunch and suggested I postpone the marriage. She said stress was making me “confused.” She said Daniel was influencing me. She said my grandmother would have wanted me to trust family.Parenting books
I told her Grandma Evelyn had trusted me because she knew exactly what kind of family we had.
My mother slapped me in the restaurant parking lot.
I covered the mark with makeup during my bridal shower.
Officer Grant listened without interrupting.
Daniel did not look surprised. He knew most of it, but not everything. Not the slap. Not how many times I had nearly called off the wedding because my family had trained me to believe peace was worth any cost.
“Tonight wasn’t just about humiliating me,” I said. “Derek wanted me impaired. Maybe photographed. Maybe recorded. Maybe pressured into signing something afterward.”
Officer Grant turned a page in her notebook. “Your videographer mentioned something else.”
Leo was brought back in.
He looked uneasy now, no longer just a witness but a man realizing he had filmed the unraveling of a family.
“I didn’t want to say it in front of everyone,” he said. “But I saw Derek talking to your father before the toast. Your dad told him, ‘Make sure she can’t make a scene tomorrow.’ I thought they meant wedding drama.”
My blood went cold.
Tomorrow.
Not tonight.
The merger meeting was set for Monday morning at 9:00.
My wedding had been Saturday evening.
If I had drunk that champagne, I might have woken up confused, ill, humiliated, with no memory of what had happened. They could have claimed I was drunk. Unstable. Emotionally unfit. They could have used it to challenge my vote, delay my attendance, or pressure Daniel into keeping me away from the meeting.
Maybe Derek had planned to stage something even worse.
The thought passed through me like a blade.
Then Officer Grant’s phone buzzed.