Chapter 1 The wedding betrayal

The church was perfect. White roses spilled from every corner, candles flickered in gold holders, and the afternoon light turned the air soft and golden. 

Sophia Hart stood at the entrance on her father’s arm, heart racing with joy. Her wedding gown felt like a dream silk and lace that caught every eye. 

She could already see Alexander at the altar, waiting for her.

Her father leaned close. “You ready, sweetheart?”

“More than ready papa ,” she whispered, smiling up at him.

Everyone in the church stood up at once. Heads turned and smiles spread.

Sophia took her first step down the aisle, slow and careful, her heart beating hard in her chest. She could feel hundreds of eyes on her, warm and approving. This was it. This was her moment.

In the front row, her mother wiped her eyes with a handkerchief, already crying. Her brother caught her gaze and lifted his thumb, grinning proudly.

Just behind the altar stood Vanessa, her best friend since childhood, her maid of honor dressed in soft pink. Vanessa smiled brightly and whispered, “You look absolutely beautiful, bestie.”

Sophia smiled back, comforted. Vanessa had always been there. Always.

Then Sophia looked at Alexander.

He looked perfect. Tall. His dark hair neatly styled. His blue eyes locked onto hers, shining as if no one else in the room existed.

They had been together for three years.

He had proposed on a snowy night in Central Park, kneeling in the cold while she cried and laughed at the same time.

They had planned every detail of this wedding together.

He loved her.

She was sure of it.

Sophia reached the altar. Her father leaned close and kissed her cheek.

“Don’t worry, baby girl,” he whispered. “You’ve got this.”

He placed her hand into Alexander’s.

Alexander’s fingers closed around hers warm, firm, familiar.

The minister smiled at them both. “We are gathered here today to witness the union of Alexander Blackwood and Sophia Hart.”

Sophia’s heart swelled. This was real. This was finally happening.

The minister nodded and lifted the velvet box. “Now is the time for you both to say your vows.”

Sophia took a breath. Her voice trembled at first, but she steadied herself.

“I, Sophia Hart, take you, Alexander Blackwood, to be my husband,” she said softly. “I promise to love you and cherish you for as long as I live.”

She finished and looked up at him, smiling through happy tears.

The church went quiet. Every breath felt loud.

Alexander squeezed her hands the small squeeze he always gave when he was nervous. Sophia smiled wider. She knew that squeeze.

He cleared his throat.

“I, Alexander Blackwood, take you, Sophia, to be my wife,” he began. “You’ve been my strength for the past few years. I’m lucky to have you in my life. Till death do me—”

He stopped.

His grip loosened.

The silence stretched on, heavy and uncomfortable.

Sophia’s smile slowly faded.

“I… I can’t do this, Soph,” Alexander said quietly, looking away from her.

The minister frowned. “I’m sorry, son, but you can’t just stop in the middle of the vows.”

Sophia’s heart raced. She tightened her hold on Alexander’s hands. “Baby… is something wrong?” she asked softly.

Alexander pulled his hands free. Completely.

He turned away from her and faced the guests instead.

“I’m done pretending,” he said, his voice louder now, reaching the back of the church. “I can’t marry Sophia.”

A wave of shock rolled through the room. Someone gasped. A chair scraped loudly against the floor.

Sophia felt the blood drain from her face. “Alex…” Her voice shook. “What are you saying? This is a joke, right?”

He finally turned back to her. There was no warmth in his eyes. No hesitation.

“I’ve been in love with someone else for months,” he said flatly. “I should’ve ended this sooner. I’m sorry.”

Sophia’s breath caught.

“Who?” she whispered.

He didn’t answer.

The name hit her anyway.

Vanessa.

Sophia turned slowly.

Vanessa was no longer smiling. She stood still, her eyes fixed on the floor. For a second, she looked ashamed.

Then she lifted her head.

Vanessa stepped forward. One step. Then another. She climbed the three small steps to the altar and stopped beside Alexander.

She reached for his hand. He let her take it.

Sophia’s chest tightened. “Vanessa?”

Vanessa raised her chin. Her voice was calm too calm. “I’m sorry you had to find out like this, Soph. I never meant to hurt you. But we didn’t want to keep lying anymore.”

Something inside Sophia snapped.

Before anyone could stop her, Sophia’s hand flew through the air.

Crack.

The slap echoed through the church.

“You’ve been sleeping with my fiancé behind my back,” Sophia shouted, shaking with rage. “And you choose my wedding day to admit it?”

She turned on Alexander, her eyes burning. “You’re heartless.”

Then she faced Vanessa again, her voice breaking. “And you my best friend. I trusted you. Was our friendship not enough? You had to steal my man too?”

The whispers exploded into loud voices. People stood. Chairs scraped.

Sophia’s mother shot to her feet. “This is disgraceful! On her wedding day?”

Her father stepped toward the altar, his face red with fury. “You planned this? Both of you?”

Alexander didn’t look at them. He looked only at Sophia.

“We didn’t want to drag it out,” he said coldly. “It wouldn’t have been fair.”

“Fair?” Sophia’s voice cracked, the word burning her throat. “You leave me at the altar in front of everyone we know, and you call that fair?”

Sophia let out a bitter laugh as tears streamed down her face. “You planned to humiliate me,” she said shakily. “And you’re doing an excellent job.”

A phone camera flashed.

Then another.

Sophia looked around and realized people were recording. This wasn’t just heartbreak anymore. This was a spectacle. By tonight, it would be everywhere.

Claire, one of the bridesmaids, stepped forward, her face hard with anger. “You two should leave. Now,” she snapped. “You’re not wanted here. Get out.”

Vanessa gave a small shrug, completely calm. “We will,” she said lightly. “Relax, Claire. No need to rush us.”

She turned to Alexander with a smile. “Paris, right?”

Alexander nodded.

He looked at Sophia one last time. “I really am sorry.”

Then he took Vanessa’s hand.

Together, they walked down the aisle hand in hand past shocked faces, past Sophia’s sobbing mother, past friends who couldn’t believe what they were seeing.

The church doors closed behind them with a heavy thud.

Sophia stood alone at the altar in her beautiful white dress. Her veil trembled. The roses smelled too strong. The candles felt too hot. The room spun.

Her legs gave out.

Her father and Claire caught her before she fell and helped her through a side door into a small dressing room.

Sophia collapsed onto the sofa. Her gown spread around her like a ruined snowdrift.

Claire knelt in front of her. “Breathe, Soph,” she said softly. “Just breathe.”

Sophia couldn’t speak. Tears ran freely, ruining her makeup.

Alexander’s suit jacket still hung over the back of a chair. His phone was in the pocket.

It started to buzz.

Again.

And again.

Sophia reached for it with shaking hands. The screen lit up with dozens of messages. 

Her fingers shook as she scrolled.

The messages went back months.

February 9 

Vanessa: We can’t keep sneaking around forever.

Alexander: We will until after the wedding. Everything’s already paid for. Let her enjoy her big day. Then we tell her.

Sophia’s stomach twisted.

April 15 

Vanessa: Public humiliation will make sure she never never tries to come back to you.

Alexander: You’re ruthless. I love it.

Sophia’s chest tightened.

June 3 

Vanessa: Promise me you won’t back out at the last second.

Alexander: I promise. I’ll say the words right when she thinks it’s forever.

Sophia dropped the phone. It hit the floor with a loud clatter.

They hadn’t just fallen in love. They had planned this.

Every second. Every word.

They wanted to break her completely, publicly, forever.

Sophia covered her mouth with both hands, holding back the scream rising in her chest.

Claire bent down, picked up the phone, and read the screen. Her face drained of color. “Oh my God…” she whispered. “They planned this. On purpose. This is… this is cruel.”

Sophia couldn’t speak. The pain was too big, too sudden. It felt like her chest had been torn open in front of the whole world.

She curled forward, sobbing into the ruined silk of her wedding dress.

The room stayed silent except for her crying.

Then

a soft scrape at the door.

Something slid underneath and stopped on the carpet.

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