Chapter 1
This was the thirteenth time I'd tried to earn their love—and my last.
For months, I'd worked myself to exhaustion, five months pregnant, hand-sewing thousands of pearls onto what I'd hoped would become the dress of my dreams.
But moments before the ceremony, my fiancé and his family burst into the bridal suite and tore it off me. They gave it to her—the girl they'd raised, the one they'd always loved more.
They stole my wedding. They stole my groom. And when I collapsed, bleeding, they made sure the ambulance took her instead—all because she'd fainted from the drama.
Watching those sirens fade, I finally understood: I was never the daughter they wanted to save.
This was the thirteenth time Raymond Sinclair had destroyed our wedding.
In the bridal suite of St. Patrick's Cathedral, I stared quietly at my reflection.
As a designer, I'd poured three years into this dress. Thirty thousand pearls, each one hand-sewn, each one stained with blood from my fingertips.
But none of that mattered now. I tucked the ultrasound photo—hidden for two months—between the pages of my vow book, my hand drifting instinctively to my belly.
After enduring twelve humiliations of being left at the altar, I thought today would be different.
I'd rehearsed my smile all morning, imagining the moment I'd stand before the priest and tell Raymond about the baby.
I took a deep breath, closed my eyes, and waited for the knock.
"BANG—"
The door behind me exploded open.
Raymond stormed in, followed by my biological parents, Patrick and Jolene Caldwell, and my adopted sister Maggie, deathly pale in her wheelchair.
"Catherine, take off the dress." Raymond's voice was flat, cold. He didn't even bother with an excuse.
The vow book slipped from my hands and hit the marble floor with a crack.
"What?" My head buzzed. "There are five hundred guests out there. The Archbishop is waiting. We start in ten minutes—"
"Maggie's tumor has gotten worse!"
Jolene lunged forward, her nails digging into my arm like talons.
"The doctors say she won't make it past this month!" Her eyes were bloodshot as she glared at me. "Her biggest regret is never walking down the aisle! You're her sister—can't you do this one thing for her?! Just give her the damn dress!"
I looked at Maggie in her wheelchair.
She clutched weakly at Raymond's tailcoat, tears streaming. "Don't force Catherine... I know I'm dying. I shouldn't ask for something so unreasonable. Even if I carry this regret to my grave—"
"Stop it, Maggie. You're not going to die."
Raymond immediately dropped to one knee beside her, gripping her hand, eyes full of anguish.
But when he stood and turned back to me, the tenderness in his eyes instantly hardened into irritation.
"Have you seen enough, Catherine?" His self-righteousness was staggering. "For you, this is just a piece of fabric! You'll wear a wedding dress again, but Maggie only gets this one shot!"
Just a piece of fabric?
Looking at these people I'd loved for five years, an absurd suffocation gripped me.
My mind uncontrollably flashed through the twelve weddings he'd already destroyed.
The first time, Maggie claimed she was afraid of thunder—they all stayed out all night.
The fifth time, she wanted to see the Northern Lights—he left me mid dress-fitting for two weeks in Iceland.
The ninth time, she faked slitting her wrists in the bathtub—he abandoned me alone in an empty church.
I thought the baby would make this time different.
My gaze dropped. The vow book lay half-open at my feet, the ultrasound peeking out, silently mocking three years of bending over backward.
I took a deep breath, about to tell them about the pregnancy, when Patrick's cane cracked against the floor.
"For God's sake, Catherine, would you stop being so goddamn selfish for once!"
He cut me off mercilessly, disgust written across his face. "We never should have brought you back! If you hadn't come back and made Maggie feel like she'd lost our love, her stress wouldn't have worsened the tumor! You owe her this!"
I owed her?
Five years ago when the Caldwells brought me home, I thought I'd finally found shelter. But in that mansion, I was the intruder.
To avoid upsetting Maggie, she got the master suite while I was stuck in a cramped room at the end of the hall. Every Christmas photo, Jolene found reasons to keep me out of frame.
They showered her with debutante balls, trust funds, and unconditional love—everything poured onto their adopted daughter.
And finally, even Raymond—originally engaged to me—became her personal knight, ready to drop everything at her beck and call.
I'd yielded for five years, stripped of everything. And now, minutes before my wedding with guests waiting, they wanted to rip away the last thing I had.
The sheer absurdity froze me in place. I swallowed the bitter taste in my throat, my hands instinctively shielding my belly.
"No."
I stepped back, staring into Raymond's eyes:
"This dress was custom-made for my body. She can't even stand—she can't wear it. And Raymond, today, I'm the bride."
"She's dying and you're rubbing it in her face that she's disabled?!" He looked at me like he'd never seen me before. "Catherine, you're vicious. You make me sick."
That snapped his last thread of patience. He closed the distance in two strides and seized my shoulders, his grip so tight I felt bone grinding against bone.
"What are you—let go—"
My scream hadn't fully escaped when he spun me around, his hand grabbing the handcrafted lacing at the back of the dress.
"RIIIP—"
Fabric tore through the air.
The buttons I'd sewn over three months—stitch by painstaking stitch—ripped apart. Countless pearls broke free and scattered, bouncing and rolling across the floor in chaotic destruction.
Cold air hit my exposed back. Raymond yanked the haute couture gown from my shoulders.
"Raymond, stop!" I reached frantically for the falling hem.
"Don't touch it!" He shoved me backward.
That shove—my stiletto heel landed on the scattered pearls. My foot shot out, and I lost all control, falling backward through empty air.
CRACK—
My lower back slammed into the sharp corner of the vanity table. Then I hit the marble floor hard enough to knock the air from my lungs.
No cushion. No mercy. No one.
A vicious pain detonated deep in my lower abdomen, radiating outward in waves that drained every ounce of strength from my body.
Then came the wetness—warm, sticky liquid flowing down the inside of my thighs.
Cold sweat broke out across my skin. I curled into myself, both hands pressed against my belly.
Raymond didn't even glance down at me.
He carefully picked up the dress and brushed off imaginary dust with gentle hands. He carried it to Maggie's wheelchair like something sacred, his voice soft:
"Go change, sweetheart. Today, you'll be the most beautiful bride."
Color bloomed across Maggie's pale cheeks. She didn't bother with mockery or gloating—just gave me one brief, dismissive glance.
"Mom..." Pain choked my throat. I dragged my trembling fingers across the floor, leaving a red trail as I reached toward Jolene. "I'm bleeding... please... help me..."
Jolene stepped back in heels, avoiding my bloodstained hand.
"Enough with the dramatics, Catherine." She looked down at me, ice in her eyes. "You slipped and fell. Now you're putting on this pathetic show for attention? Stay in here and think about what you've done."
Without another word, they surrounded Maggie's wheelchair and swept out.
The heavy oak door slammed shut. The bridal suite fell into suffocating silence.
I looked down at the pristine marble floor, now marred by a spreading pool of deep red.
That was my child. The only piece of me that was truly mine.
With shaking hands, I fumbled for my phone and swallowed the copper taste in my mouth. My fingers found 911.
The moment the dispatcher answered, the wedding march swelled on the other side of the wall. Through the door, the officiant's voice rang out:
"Ladies and gentlemen, please rise for the bride, Miss Maggie Caldwell!"
I lay in the spreading blood, perfectly still.
Not a single tear in my eyes.
