MasukThe rain hadn’t stopped.
By the time I got home, my hair was plastered to my face and my dress clung to my skin like a second layer of shame. I closed the door behind me, kicked off my heels, and let my back press against the wood. The apartment was quiet. Too quiet. The kind of quiet that made your own breathing sound like a scream.
I slid down to the floor, still holding my phone. My hands were shaking so badly I nearly dropped it. The last thing I wanted was to see his name flash on the screen.
I turned the phone face down and closed my eyes. For a moment, the darkness felt safe. But the second I let my mind rest, it all came back in sharp, unbearable fragments.
His voice.
Her perfume.
That look in his eyes when he saw me standing in the doorway.
A noise escaped my throat. Not quite a sob, not quite a scream. Just the sound of something breaking.
I don’t know how long I sat there. Maybe minutes. Maybe hours. The city moved outside, but in my little apartment, time had stopped.
I dragged myself up eventually, walking like someone carrying a body. My own body. The reflection in the hallway mirror startled me. I didn’t look like me anymore. My eyeliner had smudged down my cheeks, and my lips were pale. I looked like a ghost wearing a bridal rehearsal dress.
The wedding board on the wall stared back at me — a collage of soft pink and gold, little notes stuck with pins, a printed seating chart, a few candid polaroids from our engagement party. All of it suddenly felt like evidence from a crime scene.
I reached for the photo in the center of the board. Damien was kissing the top of my head, smiling like a man who was in love. My mother was standing right beside us in that same picture. I hadn’t noticed the way her hand rested on his arm. How had I missed it?
My grip on the photo tightened until the paper bent and tore. I let the ripped halves fall to the floor.
The phone buzzed. Once. Twice. Over and over. Damien’s name lit up the screen like a curse I couldn’t escape.
I didn’t answer.
He sent a message. Then another.
Please talk to me.
It’s not what you think. I love you.
My breath hitched. A laugh slipped out before I could stop it. Not the kind of laugh that came from joy. The kind that came from the pit of your chest when you were past crying.
I walked into the bedroom, pulled the blinds closed, and climbed onto the bed without even changing. The sheets smelled faintly of lavender. Normally it calmed me. Tonight, it felt suffocating.
As soon as I closed my eyes, the memories came — those beautiful little knives dressed as love stories.
The night he proposed. The cold wind at the park. Fairy lights strung between the trees. I’d been wearing that ridiculous pale blue dress, the one he said made me look like spring. He got down on one knee, hands shaking like I was the most important person in the world. My heart had almost exploded with happiness.
He had whispered, “You’re it for me, Elara.”
And I had believed him.
Another flash. Sunday mornings at his place, making pancakes, him wrapping his arms around me from behind and kissing the back of my neck. He’d always hum when he was happy. God, I loved that sound.
And now those same hands had been all over my mother. Those lips had kissed her the way they kissed me.
I pressed my palms against my eyes as if I could squeeze the memories out. But they wouldn’t leave. They clung to me like wet fabric.
The phone rang again. Then another call. I turned it off this time. Let the world wait. Let him wait. Let her wait.
A sharp knock on the door startled me. I froze. Then the sound of an envelope sliding under the door. I walked over slowly, heart pounding, and picked it up. A sleek ivory invitation stared back at me.
The wedding coordinator’s reminder.
Rehearsal dinner tomorrow. Press release to confirm final details. Guest list approval pending.
My laugh this time was silent. A breath with no joy in it. I ripped the envelope in half, then in half again, until it was nothing but confetti on the floor.
The next knock came about an hour later. This time, it wasn’t paper. It was people.
“Elara? Honey, open up.” It was Maggie. My best friend. My maid of honor. Her voice was soft, but it carried that note of concern that made my stomach twist.
I didn’t answer.
“Elara, I know you’re in there.”
I pressed my back against the door. “Go home, Mags.”
“Not a chance. I saw the news.”
My head snapped up. “What?”
There was a pause. “The tabloids picked it up already.”
Of course they had. Damien Whitlock wasn’t just any fiancé. He was Damien Whitlock, the youngest CEO in the Whitlock empire. Wealthy, perfect, the golden boy the press adored. And my wedding was supposed to be a fairytale headline.
Maggie’s voice softened. “You don’t have to open the door. Just… say something.”
I swallowed hard. “It’s true.”
A silence stretched on the other side. Then a soft curse. “Oh, El.” “I don’t want to talk about it.”
“Fine. But you’re not going through this alone.”
I didn’t have the strength to fight her. I unlocked the door, and she slipped inside, wrapped in a raincoat, holding a takeout bag like it was a peace offering. She didn’t say anything at first. She just pulled me into her arms, and for the first time since the betrayal, the tears finally came.
Ugly, heavy, shaking sobs. Maggie didn’t try to stop me. She just held on.
After a long while, she guided me to the couch. She opened the takeout — my favorite soup — and handed me a spoon. I stared at it like it was foreign. Eating felt impossible, but her presence anchored me back to reality.
“They’re still calling,” I whispered.
“Then don’t pick up,” she said simply.
I shook my head. “The wedding. The coordinator. The media. It’s everywhere. How do I disappear from something this loud?”
“You don’t disappear,” she said.
“You breathe. One hour at a time. And then you decide what they get to see.”
I stared at her. “What?”
“Elara, they don’t get to write your story for you. Not Damien. Not your mother. Not the reporters. You do.”
The words settled in my chest like a small ember. It didn’t burn yet, but it glowed faintly.
“I hate them,” I said quietly.
“I know.”
“I loved him. God, I was so sure.”
“I know.”
I wiped my nose with the back of my hand and let out a shaky laugh. “And my mom. How am I supposed to ever look at her again?”
“You don’t,” Maggie said without hesitation. “You look past her. Because she doesn’t deserve your eyes anymore.”
The air was thick. Heavy. But for the first time since the night began, it didn’t feel like it was crushing me.
She stayed for a few more hours, ignoring the dozens of calls lighting up my phone. When she finally left, the rain had turned into a soft mist outside. I climbed into bed again, this time with the lights off, and stared at the ceiling.
I didn’t have answers. I didn’t have a plan. But I knew one thing for sure.
The world thought I was going to marry Damien Whitlock in two days. The tabloids were probably writing romantic headlines, wedding planners were fluffing up white roses, my mother was probably sipping champagne somewhere.
And I was here.
Broken. But breathing.
A single text came in just before midnight.
Damien: I can fix this. Please. I need you.
I didn’t reply.
I didn’t cry again either.
I turned the phone off and whispered to the dark, “You’ll regret this.”
The words were soft. But they were real. And for the first time that night, I felt something new rise beneath the ache. Something cold.
Something steady.
Tomorrow, the world would expect me to be a bride.
But I wasn’t a bride anymore.
I was something else entirely.
The rain came harder, blurring the world into streaks of silver and noise.Damien’s car idled at the end of the alley, headlights slicing through the dark. His face was half-lit, half-shadowed — the kind of look that made it impossible to tell if you should run toward him or away.Alexander’s grip on my arm tightened. “Don’t even think about it.”I looked between them — father and son, mirror images separated by age and ruthlessness. The Whitlocks didn’t just build empires. They bred predators.And here I was, standing between them, soaked and shaking, with both pretending they were here to save me.“Get in the car, Elara,” Damien called, voice raised over the rain. “Please. You have to trust me.”A bitter laugh bubbled up before I could stop it. “That’s funny coming from you.”Alexander stepped closer, his voice a low current. “If you get in that car, you’ll regret it.”“And if I stay?”He didn’t answer. He didn’t have to.For a heartbeat, I saw something raw in Damien’s expression —
The message from Alexander stared back at me like a trap that had already sprung.You’re in over your head, Elara. Walk away before it’s too late.I read it twice. Three times. Every repetition made it sound less like a warning and more like a challenge.If he wanted me afraid, he’d have to try harder.I deleted the text, though the words burned themselves into memory, and slipped the phone into my bag. Outside, the city hummed — horns, voices, the pulse of a thousand ambitions colliding. I moved through it like a ghost who’d chosen not to haunt, just watch.Back home, the folder waited on the counter, silent and patient.I made coffee first — a ritual, not a need — then opened it.Photographs. Reports. Names.Most of it looked harmless on the surface: meeting notes, vendor lists, travel records. But the pattern was there if you squinted. Every leak traced back to a specific division, one under Damien’s oversight before his father quietly reassigned it.Figures.Still, something didn’
The morning after the dinner with Alexander Whitlock felt like waking from a dream I wasn’t sure I’d had—or a game I hadn’t realized I’d started.The news was everywhere. My face. His. Side by side.“Runaway Bride Seen With Groom’s Father.”“Is Alexander Whitlock Protecting His Son’s Fiancée—or Something Else?”I almost laughed when I saw the headlines. Almost.They called me “the scandal everyone loves to watch.” I’d become a show, a headline, a hashtag. And I couldn’t even deny that I’d handed them the script.But underneath the noise, I felt calm. Too calm. Like the quiet right before lightning splits the sky.The doorbell rang just as I poured coffee. My stomach twisted—it was too early for reporters, and Maggie always texted first.I opened the door halfway.A man in a dark suit stood there, expression unreadable. “Miss Vale?”“Yes.”He handed me an envelope so heavy it felt expensive. “From Mr. Whitlock.”I blinked. “Alexander?”He gave a polite nod. “You’ll find everything insi
The morning after the Whitlock gala felt strangely quiet.Too quiet.The world had been watching me last night — cameras flashing, whispers blooming like wildfire. I half expected to wake up to chaos. But the silence that filled my apartment wasn’t peace. It was the kind that comes before a storm.My phone buzzed against the counter, screen lighting up with notifications. I didn’t even have to look to know what they were. I opened it anyway.“Runaway bride attends Whitlock charity gala.”“Elara Hale seen on balcony with Alexander Whitlock.”“Whitlock heir’s ex-fiancée steals spotlight.”I couldn’t help it — a small smile tugged at my lips. The press had eaten it up, just like Alexander said they would. Damien’s damage control team must’ve been tearing their hair out. My mother, too. She probably hadn’t expected me to walk straight into their world again — and certainly not on Alexander’s arm.I scrolled through the photos. In one, I was standing close to him, his head tilted toward me
The Whitlock estate was exactly as I remembered it—polished marble, quiet fountains, and walls that whispered old money. The kind of place that made people straighten their backs and lower their voices without realizing why.I shouldn’t have been here. Not after everything. But that was exactly why I came.Layla nearly had a heart attack when I told her my plan that morning.“Elara,” she’d said, clutching her coffee like it was holy water. “Going to a Whitlock event after what happened is either the bravest thing you’ve ever done or the dumbest.”“Maybe both,” I’d replied.She wasn’t wrong. Everyone expected me to disappear. Hide. Break quietly so the Whitlocks could smooth over the scandal. I could practically hear Damien’s smug little speech in my head: *She’s emotional. She’ll calm down.*But I wasn’t calming down. I was dressing up.The evening air was cool as my car rolled up the long, tree-lined drive. Spotlights washed the front steps in soft gold. Waiters in black suits moved
The sky was painfully blue the next morning. It shouldn’t have been. It should’ve been gray and stormy, matching the way my chest felt. But no — the sun poured through my windows like the universe didn’t care about broken hearts or ruined weddings.The kettle on the counter whistled, sharp and shrill, dragging me back from another spiral of thoughts. I poured hot water over the teabag, watching the steam rise like smoke from a fire. Sleep hadn’t come easily, and when it did, it brought me dreams of gold rings slipping off fingers and laughter turning into whispers.My phone was still buzzing. Calls.Messages. Notifications. Headlines. I had stopped looking at them. Instead, I stared at my kitchen table where a single wedding magazine lay face down. I didn’t even remember putting it there. Damien’s smile was on the cover, his arm around my waist, the headline screaming out: “THE WEDDING OF THE YEAR.”Not anymore.A knock echoed through the apartment. Not a frantic one this time. Slow.







