An hour before my wedding, I was barefoot in the bridal suite of Redwood Grace Chapel in Seattle, one hand pressed against my lower back and the other resting on my swollen belly. The pain was sharp and intense, rising in waves that came and went while leaving me breathless and shaken.
At seven months pregnant, every moment felt fragile, as if the air itself could break the careful balance of this day. I was alone in the suite for the first time all morning, and the silence felt heavier than anything I had carried before.
My maid of honor, Savannah, had gone downstairs to check the flowers again, while my mother was in the reception hall adjusting place cards with nervous precision. After months of planning, this was supposed to be the perfect day where everything finally came together.
Instead, I stood there trying to breathe through contractions that I prayed were not labor yet, while my fingers traced the lace of my wedding dress like it belonged to someone else. I thought I heard my fiancé, Caleb Foster, speaking just outside the hallway door.
At first, I smiled because we never cared about superstitions, and he always joked about traditions being pointless. I imagined he was nervous and wanted to see me before everything began, maybe to say something sweet and reassuring.
Then I heard another voice, deeper and unfamiliar but slightly recognizable, and I realized it was probably his best man, Tyler. I moved closer to the door, my heart pounding with anticipation that quickly turned into dread.
Caleb laughed softly and said, “After today, none of it will matter anymore.” Tyler hesitated before asking, “Are you seriously going through with this?”
Caleb sighed heavily and replied, “What choice do I have when her father already paid half the apartment deposit, and once the baby arrives she will be too busy to question anything.”
My entire body went cold as the meaning of his words settled into my chest like ice.
Then his voice dropped lower, colder, and far more cruel than I had ever heard before. “I never loved her, and this baby changes nothing because Rachel is the one I actually want.”
The world stopped moving as I leaned against the wall, barely able to breathe while the weight of his words crushed everything I believed in. My knees nearly gave out, but I caught myself as another contraction tore through my body.
My hands shook uncontrollably while I pressed them against my face, trying to stop tears that refused to stay hidden. The man I loved was not nervous or scared, he was calculating and completely detached.
The music downstairs began to play, signaling that it was time for the ceremony to begin. I stared at my reflection in the mirror, seeing a bride who looked perfect but felt completely empty inside.
I wiped my tears slowly and took a deep breath that did not steady me at all. In that moment, I made a decision that would change everything.
I was still going to walk down that aisle, even though every logical thought told me to leave immediately. I knew I could call my brother, Anthony Rhodes, and disappear before anyone noticed anything was wrong.
But if I left, Caleb would control the narrative and twist the story into something that painted me as unstable or irrational. He had always been good at convincing people, and I knew they would believe him if I gave him the chance.
I refused to let him destroy my dignity along with everything else he had already taken. Instead, I asked Savannah to come back upstairs because I needed someone who truly knew me.
Leave a Comment