Part 2: The First Bride Was Never Dead…soju

No one in the boutique moved.

Not the customers.
Not the staff.
Not even the bride.

The necklace still trembled between the poor woman’s fingers, but now it felt like the whole room was hanging from it.

The rich bride-to-be stared at her as if the world had cracked open beneath her feet.

“What did you just say?” she whispered.

The poor woman pressed one trembling hand against her burning cheek.

“I said,” she answered softly, “he told everyone I died after the fire.”

A ripple of whispers tore through the boutique.

The elderly owner closed his eyes for one pained second.

“I remember the order,” he said. “The groom came here himself. He chose this piece in secret. He asked for her initials inside the clasp… and their wedding date hidden beneath the gold.”

The bride shook her head violently.

“No.”

But her voice no longer sounded furious.

It sounded afraid.

The poor woman slowly opened the clasp wider.

Inside, engraved in tiny letters, was a date from three years earlier.

Three years before the engagement the boutique had been preparing for.

The bride stepped back.

“That’s impossible.”

The poor woman burst into tears.

“We were married quietly,” she whispered. “His father said I wasn’t good enough for the family. Then the fire happened. I survived. But when I woke up, they had already announced that I was dead.”

A customer near the entrance gasped.

The old owner’s hands shook harder.

The bride stared at the necklace, then at the woman’s face, then toward the boutique door as if she expected the groom to appear and deny everything.

But the poor woman was already reaching into her bag.

She pulled out an old folded document, edges worn from years of being hidden.

The owner took it and unfolded it carefully.

His face went white again.

It was a marriage certificate.

Signed.
Stamped.
Legal.

The bride stopped breathing.

The owner’s voice broke as he read:

“Marriage registered between the groom and…”

He looked up at the poor woman.

“…his first bride.”

The room erupted in whispers.

The poor woman could barely stand now.

Then she placed one more thing on the counter.

A small burned photograph.

In it, she and the groom stood together, smiling, and around her neck was the same necklace.

On the back, in the groom’s handwriting, were six words:

For my wife, before the fire.

The bride’s knees nearly gave out.

And in the middle of that luxury jewelry boutique, under diamond reflections and raised phones, everyone understood the truth:

the poor woman had not come back for money.

She had come back alive.

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