Brothers, Hate Me Already!
As Zoey is going to retire, a system glitch puts her in a novel as the villainess. Her new mission: to be hated. But when she begins her scheming, her every inner thought is broadcast loud and clear to her new family. Instead of earning their disgust, she becomes the most cherished treasure. Will she find a way to get her own life back, or keep being the apple of their eyes?
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Groom’s Bowtie vs. Waitress’s Bowtie
He wears brown silk; she wears black satin. Both tied tight, both hiding something. The tension isn’t in vows—it’s in who blinks first. *Brothers, Hate Me Already!* turns etiquette into espionage. One look says: I know your secret. 💫
Guests Are the Real Main Characters
While the couple freezes mid-smile, the guests’ faces tell the real story—shock, delight, suspicion. That woman clutching her chest? She’s already written three fanfics. *Brothers, Hate Me Already!* proves: weddings are just group therapy with champagne. 🥂
Hologram = Red Flag Alert
A floating UI saying ‘Congratulations, Host Master’? That’s not tech—it’s trauma. The bride’s micro-expression shifts from joy to dread in 0.3 seconds. *Brothers, Hate Me Already!* weaponizes futurism to expose emotional fragility. Chills. ❄️
The Bouquet Is a Shield
She grips those white roses like a lifeline—until the waitress steps forward, knife in hand, and everything shatters. Not romance. Not drama. This is psychological ballet. *Brothers, Hate Me Already!* makes you question every smile at your next wedding. 😶
The Veil Hides More Than Just Hair
Her tiara sparkles, but her eyes betray panic—every glance at the waiter feels like a coded message. In *Brothers, Hate Me Already!*, the wedding isn’t sacred; it’s a stage for silent warfare. That knife reveal? Pure cinematic gasp. 🤯