When the Bells Fell Silent
I was getting married, but my boyfriend of five years did not know it yet.
Lately, he had been driving a female coworker home every night and coming back late.
She had a terrible memory and was always leaving things behind in his car. First it was earrings. Then adhesive bra inserts. Then intimate photos.
One night, at midnight, she called to say she had left her allergy medication in his car. My boyfriend pulled his pants back on and rushed out the door to deliver it to her.
Because of her, our wedding had already been postponed 19 times.
After five years together, I decided to give him one last chance. "Either stop driving her home, or the wedding is off."
He stayed silent all night. After that, he actually started coming home on time.
I thought things were finally getting better.
Then, one week before the wedding, I opened the front door and found half the furniture in our living room gone.
The woman next door poked her head out and ran a hand over my washing machine with a smile. "Amanda, we're neighbors now. Ignatius loaned me the money to buy a house. He said I could use some of these old appliances until I get settled."
My hands trembled as I opened my banking app. The $300,000 wedding fund we had spent five years saving was gone. Every last cent.
This time, I did not even have the strength to argue.
Then my mother called. "Sweetheart, how would you feel about moving the wedding to Rose Garden? I think your current venue doesn't do you justice."
I looked around the half-empty living room and laughed. "Sure. And while we're at it, let's replace the groom too."
After all, my mother had remarried into one of the wealthiest families in the country.
My five stepbrothers had been waiting years for me to come home. And among the men around them who wanted to marry me?
There was no shortage of candidates.