It was her. Emily’s wedding. From three years ago.
His new project file had only one folder:
The Template Bride
Then came the Hawthorne wedding.
For two months, Liam thrived. He customized the template for each bride. Swap the drone shot for a church steeple. Change the string quartet to a lo-fi acoustic cover. The template was a skeleton, he told himself. I am the soul.
The template wasn’t a generic build. It was someone’s actual, stolen wedding film. The drone shots, the audio mix, the golden titles—all of it ripped from a couple who had paid a real editor. That editor had gone bankrupt, sold their hard drive, and now Liam was selling their memories as a .
It was a fully pre-assembled project file. Drag, drop, render. He paid $47, downloaded the 12GB zip file, and unzipped it like a archaeologist opening a tomb.
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