
The day I got married in May, I saw a glitch in the air. A line of floating text, shimmering like a live-stream comment, drifted across my vision: [The bride is going to die today!] I blinked, my heart hammering against my ribs, assuming it was a migraine hallucination brought on by the stress of the wedding. I brushed it off. But the moment the reception ended and I stepped out of the hotel, a car appeared out of nowhere. The impact sent me flying. As the world blurred into a haze of red and asphalt, I saw another message hovering above the pavement: [Poor girl. Someone traded a glass of wine for your soul.] Then, darkness. When I opened my eyes again, the smell of expensive lilies and floor wax rushed back into my lungs. I was back. Reborn. I looked up just in time to see my best friend, Helen, walking toward me with a radiant smile, holding a glass of vintage red wine. 1 “Claire! Congratulations, babe! You finally got your fairytale ending with the man of your dreams!” Helen’s voice, sweet as spun sugar, pulled me back into the present. I looked around the ballroom, the realization hitting me like a physical blow: I was really back. “Claire, as your maid of honor, I’m the first to toast to the new Mrs. Miller!” As she held out the glass, the blood in my veins turned to ice. The phantom pain of my bones shattering under the weight of that car hadn't fully faded. That haunting message flickered in my mind again: [Someone traded a glass of wine for your soul!] My hand shook so violently that when I reached for the glass, I ended up knocking it straight out of her hand. It shattered against the marbled floor, a dark stain spreading across the white rug like a fresh wound. “Claire? What’s wrong? I’m your best friend!” Helen’s eyes welled with tears, her lower lip trembling. The commotion drew Don over immediately. Seeing my ghostly pale face and Helen’s tears, he frowned, his protective instincts kicking in. “Helen, what did you do to upset my wife?” He pulled me into his arms, his grip firm and steady. His eyes were filled with nothing but genuine worry for me. Suddenly, a new comment scrolled across my vision: [The groom seems so devoted. So why did he marry the best friend the second the bride died in the last life?] [Wait, did the best friend really use a glass of wine to steal the bride’s life and her man??] My heart skipped a beat. They were right. Don loved me. We had been together for five years, and he had always been my rock, my fiercest advocate. Even now, without knowing what had happened, he instinctively took my side against Helen. But the thought chilled me to the bone: this man, who supposedly loved me to the point of obsession, had married Helen only two months after my gruesome death. I remembered how he used to say he found Helen "tiring" and "superficial." I stared at the broken glass on the floor. Helen must have done something. She didn't just kill me; she used some dark obsession to steal my life. Fuelled by a sudden, sharp clarity, I stepped forward and snatched Helen’s designer clutch from her hand. Ignoring her protests, I dug through it until I found a small, leather-bound journal. In my previous life, I remember seeing her give a journal just like this to Don as a wedding gift when they got married. It had been a chronicle of her secret, years-long pining for him. I realized then that she hadn't stayed close to me out of friendship. She stayed close to stay near Don. I flipped the journal open, exposing the pages to the crowd, and asked with a cold sneer, “Helen, you’ve been lusting after my husband for years. Is this what a 'best friend' does?” Helen turned deathly pale. She lunged for the book, her face a mask of terror. “Claire, no! It’s not like that, please—” She tried to grab my arm, but Don shoved her back. “Get away from her, Helen. You’re pathetic.” Amidst the hushed whispers and judgmental stares of our guests, Helen fled the hotel in tears. As her figure vanished through the revolving doors, the weight on my chest finally began to lift. Don turned to me, his eyes full of remorse. “Claire, I’m so sorry. I should have seen through her sooner. I knew she was off, but I didn't want to force you to cut ties. I’m so sorry, honey.” I threw my arms around him, overwhelmed by the joy of having him back. “It’s okay. I was the blind one.” I thought I had solved it. I thought Helen was the one who had traded my life away. But as the night ended and I stepped out of the hotel, the same car appeared. The same impact. The same agonizing death. When I opened my eyes again and saw Helen walking toward me with that same glass of wine, my heart didn't just sink—it screamed. I was back. Again. 2 “Claire! Congratulations, babe! You finally got your fairytale ending...” I didn't move. I just stared at her face, searching for a crack in the mask. [The bride got hit again! Guess the best friend wasn't the killer after all. So who is it?] [Wait, if she isn’t the killer, why did the groom marry her?] The comments mirrored my own confusion. I decided to be direct. “Helen, you’re in love with Don, aren't you?” “Claire... I’m so sorry...” Her eyes filled with tears again, but this time, she didn't deny it. “That was a long time ago...” Before she could finish, a different glass of red wine was thrust between us. “Claire, happy wedding day! Here, let’s toast to your success.” Helen took the opportunity to slip away. “I’ll let you talk to your guest, Claire. We’ll chat later.” Standing before me was Victor, the Senior VP at my firm. He didn't wait for me to take the glass; he simply pressed it into my hand. The deep crimson liquid caught the light, looking thick and viscous. [Here we go! This is the second drink of the night!] [Victor and the bride are total rivals. He’s a prime suspect for sure!] I looked at the text and set the glass down on a nearby table as if it were a poisonous snake. “Victor, I’m so sorry. I’ve developed a sudden allergy to alcohol. I can’t touch it.” I had known Victor for six years. We were the CEO’s two right hands, locked in a brutal power struggle for the Managing Director position. Last month, I had effectively ended that war by landing a $300 million contract. The CEO had promoted me on the spot, and Victor had been seething ever since. In my first life, he had stepped into my role the moment I was gone. He hated my guts. If a single glass of wine could get me out of the way and hand him the career he craved, would he hesitate? He didn't buy my excuse. His eyes darkened with irritation. “An allergy? You didn't seem to have one last month when you were throwing back shots to celebrate that merger.” I gave him a chilly smile. “Maybe that’s why I developed it. Too much of a good thing.” He stepped closer, his voice low and insistent. “Claire, it’s your wedding day. It’s bad luck to refuse a toast from your partner.” His persistence felt like a threat. I was certain now—this was the drink. I pretended to reach for the glass, but as my fingers brushed it, I "accidentally" swept it off the table. The red wine splashed all over his pristine, white designer suit. “Victor! Oh my god, I’m so sorry! Let me help you.” I grabbed a dirty rag from a busboy’s tray and started scrubbing at his chest. “Claire! Are you kidding me?” He was shaking with rage. “This suit cost five thousand dollars, and you’re rubbing it with a grease rag?” He was too livid to continue the toast. He pushed my hand away and stormed out of the ballroom to find a restroom. A server quickly swept up the glass shards. I let out a breath I didn't know I was holding. I knew Victor obsessed over his appearance; ruining that suit was the only way to get rid of him. I looked over at Helen, wanting to finish our conversation. But before I could take a step, a car materialized out of thin air and slammed into me again. 3 Everything went black. When I woke up, I was back in the ballroom. The music was playing. The flowers smelled like a funeral. [Tsk tsk... wrong again!] [This is her third reset. If she misses this time, she’s gone for good.] Panic, cold and sharp, took hold of me. One last chance? I racked my brain, replaying every second of the night. I only ever had three drinks in my hand throughout the entire reception. If it wasn't Helen, and it wasn't Victor... then it had to be her. I walked toward the head table. Don saw me and took my hand, leading me straight to his mother. “Claire, there you are. Come on, let’s go toast with my mom.” His mother, Judith, was beaming. She handed me a thick envelope. “Claire, dear, a little something for the honeymoon.” At that moment, someone filled my glass. Judith raised hers, waiting for the clink of crystal. I looked at the wine, and my limbs felt like they were filled with lead. In my first life, this was the last drink I ever had. Judith had always been against our marriage because I was four years older than Don. She only relented last month after being diagnosed with terminal stage IV cancer; she didn't want to die without seeing her son settled. But I remembered something from the first life. After I died, the doctors told her she had been "misdiagnosed." What are the odds? I die, and she’s suddenly cured? It had to be a trade. My life for hers. I reached for the glass, but my fingers wouldn't close around it. I didn't care about the scene anymore. “Judith!” I slapped the glass out of her hand. It shattered. “Stop acting! You did something to the wine, didn't you?” The ballroom went silent. Every guest turned to stare. “This is the trade, isn't it? If I die, your cancer goes away! How convenient that you were 'misdiagnosed' the moment I was put in the ground!” Judith’s face went from pale to a mottled, angry red. “Claire? What are you talking about? What trade? What cancer?” Don grabbed my shoulders. “Claire, honey, stop. You’re not making sense. My mother would never—” He didn't finish. Outside the floor-to-ceiling windows, a red sedan was silently hurtling toward the hotel entrance. The comments above me exploded: [Look out! The car is back!] I tried to run, but my body was frozen, anchored to the floor. [The car appearing means she guessed wrong again!] [But how? If it’s not the friend, the rival, or the mother-in-law... who the hell is left?] The car grew larger in the window. My heart hammered against my teeth. I closed my eyes, waiting for the final crush of metal— And then I saw it. In the corner of the room. The shards of Victor's glass. Why were they still there? In a flash of lightning, the pieces of the puzzle slammed together. The inconsistencies. The "misdiagnoses." The way everyone was reacting. They were all lying. I finally knew who had traded my life away. 4 The car, which had been seconds from impact, vanished into thin air. The suffocating pressure in my chest evaporated as the truth set in. I slowly stood up from the floor. The guests were all staring at me, but their expressions had changed. Their faces were identical—blank, expectant masks. They all stood up in unison. They spoke with one voice: “Claire, who is the real killer?” I let out a dry, hollow laugh. “You tell me.” The Helen-construct stepped forward, pointing at Victor. “It’s him. He’s the only one who stood to gain. He took your job, Claire. He took your life’s work. He’s the benefactor.” I shook my head. “No. It wasn't him.” As the words left my lips, the ballroom began to dissolve. The walls melted away, and suddenly, I was standing in my old office. It was the day after I had been "killed." The CEO was announcing the search for a new Managing Director. Victor stood up. “I’ll do it,” he said. My former assistant jumped up, her face red with indignation. “Claire worked her life away for this! You can’t just swoop in! Even if she never comes back, she’d hate for you to be the one to take it.” The CEO frowned. “Victor, didn't you apply for the transfer to the London office?” Victor took his transfer papers out of his pocket and tore them into pieces in front of everyone. “Sir, my capabilities are proven. Claire’s projects are at a critical stage. If I don't take them over, no one can finish them. They’ll fail.” My assistant sneered. “You just want her commission. You want the glory.” Victor didn't argue. He just looked at the CEO. I had left behind a $300 million project. If it failed, the firm would owe triple that in liquidated damages. Victor was the only one who could save it. So, the CEO gave him my seat. The Helen-vision hissed in my ear. “See? The motive! He wanted your life!” “Keep watching,” I whispered. The scene fast-forwarded three months. The project was a massive success. At the celebration party, Victor stood on the stage with a microphone. “Everyone in this room knows Claire and I were rivals for six years,” Victor said to the silent crowd. “But what you don't know is that she was the only person in this industry I truly respected. If we hadn't been competing, we might have been friends. But being enemies suited us just fine.” He paused, looking at my empty chair. “I took her job, but I’m not a thief. This project was her blood and sweat. Her name stays on the contract. And the seven-figure bonus attached to it? I’ve requested the firm pay it directly to her mother’s estate. I don't want a dime of it.”
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