My Wedding, His Takedown

Six years after our divorce, I ran into Sebastian at the police station. He had climbed the ranks from an undercover agent to a respected inspector. I had fallen from a cherished heiress to a social pariah. He was there, flush with success, planning his wedding. I was there to collect my father’s death certificate. As I turned to leave, his voice halted me. “Stella, do you still hate me?” I shook my head. Hate is the offspring of love. After six long years, the love was gone. And so was the hate. A young officer, blind to the tension, chirped, “Come on, everyone, share Inspector Sebastian’s happy news!” He reached out to hand me a piece of wedding candy, but Sebastian intercepted his hand, quickly catching up to me. His voice was tight. “What brought you here? I can help-” I lifted the documents in my hand, cutting him off. “It’s done.” Then I walked straight out of the precinct. The irony wasn’t lost on me. We had met here twice now. The first time, I had watched my father be brought to justice. Sebastian grabbed my arm, forcing me to stop. “Are you alright?” Such a cliché greeting. My eyes dropped to the new wedding ring on his left hand. My answer was just as predictable. “I’m fine.” He pulled his hand back as if my skin had burned him. Leo’s car was idling by the entrance. I turned and gave Sebastian a final nod. “My husband is here.” His voice thickened. “Okay, goodbye.” I was done with goodbyes where he was concerned. As the car pulled away, he remained rooted in place, watching. “Stella,” Leo asked, his face full of gossip. “Are you using me to ward off an admirer? That officer looked like he wanted to set me on fire with his eyes. Why does he seem so familiar?” I smoothed the crumpled edge of the document in my lap. “That’s Sebastian Vance.” Leo snapped his head towards me, disbelieving. “The Sebastian Vance? The special crimes expert? The one they interview on TV about cold cases? The guy whose interrogation techniques are taught at the police academy?” At my nod, he stared blankly for another second before I had to remind him. “Eyes on the road, Leo.” But he couldn’t let it go. “No wonder they made him a Senior Detective so young. Now it all clicks. He spent nearly a decade deep undercover. Only resurfaced after taking down that massive syndicate. The main suspect was… Harrison, wasn’t he?” “Yes.” “Right, Harrison…that last name…” He seemed to remember that my last name was also Harrison and abruptly fell silent. My voice remained calm as I answered the question he left unasked. “Yes, that was my dad.” The main culprit of the Harrison Organized Crime Syndicate, personally brought to justice by Sebastian Vance. Leo awkwardly scratched his head. “I’m so sorry, Stella. I brought up something painful.” Mentioning it now, it no longer hurt. It was more like talking about someone else’s story, my emotions perfectly even. The atmosphere in the car grew a little awkward. Leo’s gaze fell on the papers in my hand. He quickly changed the subject. “Right, what were you doing at the precinct today?” I ran my finger over the prominent word “DEATH” on the document, and said. “To cancel my father’s… registration.” Half a month ago, Dad passed away. He suddenly vomited blood in his cell. The diagnosis was terminal stomach cancer. They released him on medical parole, but he lasted less than three months. On his deathbed, he left his last words to me. “Your father is guilty. I don’t hold that against Sebastian. But he lied to you. For that alone, I wish I could end him myself.” Dad never blamed me. Even though he’d refused hundreds of my visits over six years. I knew he wasn’t blaming me for bringing a snake into our home. He never wanted me to go through life branded as a criminal’s daughter. The thought of Dad still brought a pang of sorrow. To shake it off, I turned to Leo, who clearly had questions on his mind. “Want to hear my story?” I am the heiress to what was once the country’s largest crime syndicate. And the ex-wife of one of law enforcement’s most prominent figures. This is my story, tangled between two warring worlds.

When I was sixteen, I was kidnapped by a rival gang. I managed to escape one night, only to find myself stranded in a rough neighborhood. Trash and cigarette butts littered the ground, and rats squeaked in the sewers. Under the dim, flickering streetlights, a drunk blocked my path. A boy pulled me behind him, shielding me. It was Sebastian Vance, eighteen years old. He wore a faded black T-shirt, his arms lean and strong. When he took the blow of a glass bottle for me, he didn’t even utter a grunt. At the time, I didn’t know it was a setup. I just thought it was a classic damsel-in-distress scenario, and I was falling for my hero. So, I told my dad when he arrived. “Didn’t you want to find me a bodyguard? I want him.” Bodyguard was just a cover. Sebastian back then was dirt poor, with nothing but his strength. I needed an excuse to keep him by my side. Dad admired him too, saying the young man had a spark in his eyes and would achieve great things someday. He truly did make something of himself. After just two years, he was accepted into the same university as me. The day he received his acceptance letter, his eyes welled up. “Stella, I owe you and your dad my life.” “If I can, I want to stay by your side forever.” Sebastian would wake up at six every morning, take an hour-long bus ride, and stand in a long line. All just so I could have a hot breakfast bun before my 8 AM class. He would spend his entire paycheck just to buy a pretty brooch I’d casually complimented. Yet, his own sweater, pilled and faded, he wore for three years. His bag always contained painkillers, band-aids, an umbrella, and sanitary pads, all for my careless self. He was so good to me, so good that even Dad couldn’t find fault. The year we graduated, he proposed joining the Harrison Corporation. Dad hesitated, saying he didn’t need to repay us. But Sebastian knelt down. “I know I’m not worthy, but I love Stella. “I want the right to stay by her side.” I didn’t know then that Dad was already being coerced and falling into a deep abyss. I only remember he talked with Sebastian in the study for a long time. When they came out, Dad placed my hand in Sebastian’s. “Sebastian, promise me you’ll always keep my girl happy, pure, and honorable.” At 25, I had my master’s degree. Sebastian, through sheer force of competence, had risen to become a core executive at the corporation. But the higher he climbed, the more distant he became. He watched me with an unnerving intensity. Then, out of nowhere, he said,”Sometimes, ,wish I could just walk away from all of this… for you.” But when I asked him what he meant, he said nothing. Leo cut in. “Did he realize he really loved you, so he wanted to give up his undercover identity?” I shook my head. “I don’t know, and it doesn’t matter.” Whatever momentary conflict he might have felt, it didn’t change his relentless pursuit of justice. When I was 26, Sebastian proposed. We got the marriage license first and began planning the ceremony. The wedding day was lavish. I was in a gown of pure white. And I watched, with my own eyes, as Sebastian flashed his badge and put the cuffs on my father. Leo leaned forward, aghast. “On your wedding day? That’s brutal! Tell me you rushed over and punched him?” I shook my head again. “I didn’t get the chance. He walked away with my bridesmaid.” “Bridesmaid? Who?” “His current wife.”

A few days before, photos from Sebastian’s wedding had been blowing up our alumni chat. The bride, as expected, was Chloe Davis. My college best friend. My roommate. She came from a low-income family. She was plain, always hiding behind thick-rimmed glasses. But she was fiercely hardworking and even more fiercely proud. I remember when our professor mocked her accent, saying it “carried the distinct scent of the countryside.” She just flushed a deep red, but she never lowered her head. I was the one who approached her. I invited her to join the study group I had with Sebastian. Maybe it was their similar backgrounds, their same stubborn grit. They got along famously from the start. Or perhaps… the connection was just instant. The cheap food I found unpalatable, they both enjoyed. I liked wearing bright, colorful clothes; they both preferred durable, dark shirts. When given two choices for a project, they would invariably and synchronously pick the other option. But all their interactions were filtered through me, maintaining a polite distance. So, I never once suspected infidelity. After we graduated with our master’s degrees. Chloe struggled in her career and came to me for help. I wanted to give her a boost, so I pulled some strings and got her a job at Harrison Corporation. I even asked Sebastian to keep an eye on her. Unlike our college trio, this time, I wasn’t there to stand between them. And in my absence, they grew close. Why Chloe? Perhaps it was because the man who had hidden his true self for so long could finally stop pretending around her. I suspected nothing. Not until our wedding day, when Chloe rushed into Sebastian’s arms, her eyes shining with tears. “You did it! Ten years of playing a part… you can finally be yourself again!” It took ten years, but I was finally meeting the real Sebastian Vance. He just watched me from a distance, silent and detached, as if he were profiling a suspect. I had so many questions I wanted to ask. What would happen to my dad? When did you and she start this? And when did you start lying to me? But he didn’t give me the chance. Leading Chloe by the hand, he walked over, saying coldly. “He won’t be detained during the investigation. Pack a few changes of clothes for your dad and send them to the detention center.” He looked at my tear-streaked makeup, his expression softening slightly. I hurled my bouquet at his face. Then I picked up a glass of wine nearby and aggressively splashed it over him. The wine splattered onto Chloe’s pink bridesmaid dress. She whimpered, sounding wronged. “Sebastian, don’t go soft. Loving her was just an act; you wouldn’t actually fall for your own performance, would you?” Her single sentence snapped Sebastian back to reality. He picked up a glass of wine too, and poured it directly over my head. “An eye for an eye. I’m doing this for Chloe.” “Talk to me when you’re sober!” He walked away, Chloe in tow, leaving me standing alone. In the days that followed, sleep became a stranger. Harrison Corporation was seized. Every asset my family owned was frozen and cataloged. I dodged reporters while scrambling to find a lawyer for my father. The final conclusion was that there was no way out. Only then did I truly allow myself to understand, in the worldly sense, that my father was a bad man. The worldview I had built over a lifetime shattered in that single moment. Human nature is a tangled thing. No one is purely anything. He committed many wrongs, yet he adored his daughter and was passionate about philanthropy. Similarly, no one is perfectly good. Like Sebastian Vance. He was extensively covered by the media, bestowed with titles like “Shadow of Justice” and “Dawn Breaker of Darkness.” Yet, I found him kissing Chloe in our wedding-decorated home. I had no strength left to argue. I passed out. “What happened to you after that?!” Leo asked, urgent. “After that… I don’t remember much. I almost died.”

Perhaps some primal self-preservation instinct finally kicked in. I fell ill, my mind sinking into a dense fog. Maybe out of pity, Sebastian never filed for annulment. Instead, he took a two-month leave and brought me from one doctor to the next. In therapy, I refused to speak. When given medication, I refused to open my mouth. He even resorted to strapping me down for electroconvulsive therapy. The side effects were devastating, often causing lasting damage. That’s why I can never hold a paintbrush again. Back then, I had no will to get better. I’d hidden a razor blade behind the mirror, waiting for the day of my father’s sentencing to finally set myself free. Sebastian, however, was furious. He forced my mouth open, making me swallow the pills. “Do you still think you’re that spoiled princess from before? Can’t you stop being so stubborn?” In the past, every time I had to take medicine, I’d throw a minor fit. And Sebastian would always patiently coax me. “Come on, sweetie, once you swallow it, I’ll give you a candy.” This time, there was no candy. The moment he let go, I threw up everything. Sebastian lost his patience, looking down at me. “Look at you now. I shouldn’t have bothered with you.” The door slammed shut, and he smoked in the living room all night. The next day, Chloe showed up. Their argument erupted almost immediately. “Sebastian, you’re an officer with a future! She’s a criminal’s daughter. Why are you still tied to her?” A long silence hung in the air before his low voice finally cut through it. “I looked after her for ten years, Chloe. You wouldn’t just abandon a stray dog you’d raised that long.” A stray dog. How compassionate of him. Their shouting match somehow twisted into another desperate kiss, right there in the foyer of the new home my father had bought for me. It felt like a desecration. I snapped. I stormed out and smashed everything I could get my hands on, aiming straight for the wedding portrait with their blissfully smiling faces . Sebastian shielded Chloe behind him, just as he used to shield me. He watched my breakdown, my frenzy, with cold indifference. Chloe feigned fear. “I told you, didn’t I? She has a criminal’s blood flowing in her veins, selfish, violent… truly terrifying.” Mentioning Dad, I became hysterical. I picked up a shard of glass, lunging at them. But Sebastian kicked it away. His words were full of disappointment. “Stella Harrison, you’ve exhausted the last shred of my compassion for you.” The day Sebastian went to file for annulment, My father’s final sentence also came down. Life imprisonment. Through the iron bars, Dad’s old eyes filled with tears. He saw my desire to die instantly. “My girl, live, please, your father is begging you.” He had already prepared a fallback for me. A substantial trust fund in an overseas institution. My dad had never said “please” in his life. So I thought, then I’ll live. The last time I saw Sebastian, in front of the precinct, Those were his final words to me. “Take care of yourself.” The car entered a tunnel, darkness enveloped us, leaving only a warm, dim glow. Suddenly, the stark white light of my phone flashed. An unknown number. “Hello?” It was Sebastian. “You left your ID behind. Can we meet?”

🌟 Continue the story here 👉🏻 📲 Download the “NovelMaster” app 🔍 search for “307341”, and watch the full series ✨! #NovelMaster #浪漫Romance #现实主义Realistic #魔幻Magic #重生Reborn

Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *