
Abandoned at the Altar
Chapter 2
I woke to sunlight streaming through the windows, momentarily disoriented by the unfamiliar luxury of the bridal suite. For one blissful second, everything felt right—until the throbbing in my cheek brought last night's reality crashing back. My fingers trembled as they traced the tender swelling where Ryan's hand had struck me.
The mirror confirmed what I already knew. A purplish bruise bloomed across my cheekbone like a terrible flower. I stared at my reflection, barely recognizing the woman looking back at me—eyes red-rimmed from a night of tears, hair tangled from restless hours.
"This isn't love," I whispered to myself, the words hanging in the air like a revelation.
Ryan hadn't returned. No calls. No texts. Just silence and the lingering sting of his betrayal.
My phone felt heavy in my hand as I pulled up his contact. The wedding was scheduled to begin in six hours, and somewhere in the venue below, coordinators were arranging flowers, caterers were preparing food, and guests would soon be arriving—all for a ceremony that couldn't possibly take place now.
"Ryan," I began after the beep, my voice breaking. "I... I can't do this. I can't marry someone who would hurt me the way you did last night." Tears streamed down my face, the salt stinging the bruise. "Eight years, and I never knew you could... that you would..." I inhaled sharply, trying to steady myself. "Whatever is happening with Savannah, whatever you're hiding—it doesn't matter anymore. There won't be a wedding today. I deserve better than this. I deserve better than you."
My thumb hovered over the screen before pressing "Send," a small act of defiance that felt monumental. The message disappeared into the digital ether, carrying with it the death of eight years of dreams and compromises.
I sank onto the edge of the bed, allowing myself one moment of grief for the future I'd thought was mine. Then I stood, reaching for my suitcase. I needed to call my parents, the venue, my bridesmaids—
The door burst open without warning.
"What do you think you're doing?" Eleanor Campbell's voice cut through the room like a blade. She stood in the doorway, immaculate in a powder-blue designer suit, flanked by Ryan's brother Michael and sister Vivian. Behind them loomed two men in dark suits—security, I realized with a jolt.
"Mrs. Campbell," I began, instinctively turning my bruised cheek away from her. "I was just—"
"Getting dressed for your wedding," she finished for me, striding into the room as if she owned it. Her eyes narrowed as she caught sight of my face. "What happened to you?"
"Your son happened," I said, my voice stronger than I expected. "He hit me last night before leaving to see someone named Savannah."
Eleanor's expression didn't change, but something flickered in her eyes—not surprise, I realized with horror. Recognition.
"Don't be dramatic, Isabella." She waved her hand dismissively. "Ryan told me you became hysterical when he was called away for a patient emergency. Clearly, you've worked yourself into quite a state."
"He slapped me across the face!"
"Lower your voice," she hissed, glancing toward the open door. "Do you have any idea what canceling this wedding would do? The guests, the press, the humiliation—" She stepped closer, her perfume suffocating me. "You will pull yourself together. You will walk down that aisle. We will not have a scandal."
Twenty minutes later, I found myself sitting rigidly in a makeup trailer adjacent to the venue, staring vacantly as a makeup artist named Jen carefully layered foundation over my bruise.
"I'm so sorry," she whispered when Eleanor stepped outside to take a call. "I can help you get out of here if you need to."
Before I could respond, Eleanor returned, positioning herself directly behind the makeup chair, her reflection watching me in the mirror like a hawk.
"Ryan called," she said, leaning down until her lips nearly touched my ear. "He said you left him quite the dramatic message. He explained everything to me—how you became hysterical when he tried to leave for a medical emergency. How you threatened to hurt yourself if he didn't stay."
My eyes widened in shock. "That's a lie!"
"Is it?" Eleanor's perfectly manicured nails dug into my shoulder. "Who do you think people will believe? My son—a respected medical professional—or you, the girl who's always been desperate to claw her way into our family?"
As Jen's brush continued its work, carefully erasing the evidence of Ryan's cruelty, I realized with sickening clarity that I was trapped in something far more dangerous than I had ever imagined.
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