
Abandoned at the Altar
Chapter 3
A commotion erupted outside the makeup trailer. Through the small window, I caught a glimpse of my mother's anguished face as she tried to push past a hulking security guard in a dark suit.
"¡Isabella! ¡Mi hija!" Her voice, though muffled by the walls, carried the desperate concern that only a mother could feel. She was reaching for the door, her fingers splayed against the air as if she could somehow bridge the distance between us.
"Keep her out," Eleanor commanded coldly, not even turning to look. "We don't need any more hysterics."
The security guard placed his massive hands on my mother's shoulders, forcing her back. I watched helplessly as she struggled against his grip, her eyes locked on mine through the window.
"Mama," I whispered, half-rising from the chair.
Eleanor's fingers dug into my shoulder, pushing me back down. "Sit still. The makeup isn't finished."
Jen's eyes met mine in the mirror, wide with concern. Her hands trembled slightly as she continued to layer concealer over the purpling bruise on my cheek. Each gentle dab of the sponge felt like a betrayal—erasing the evidence of what Ryan had done, making it easier for the Campbells to maintain their perfect façade.
"There," Eleanor said with cold satisfaction as my mother's protests faded down the hallway. "Much better. We can't have scenes like that ruining the day, can we?"
I said nothing, my throat too tight with unshed tears. Through the window, I could no longer see my mother, only the empty corridor where she had stood moments before.
* * *
"Stand up straight, Isabella." Eleanor's voice hissed in my ear as we moved through the grand lobby of the venue. "Smile. People are watching."
I felt like a marionette, my limbs moving without my consent as the Campbell family herded me toward the waiting guests. Michael flanked my left side while Vivian walked close behind, both of them smiling brilliantly at the assembled crowd. The security guards had positioned themselves strategically near the exits.
"There she is!" cooed one of Eleanor's friends, a woman with a face so taut from surgeries that her smile seemed painted on. "The beautiful bride!"
A circle formed around me—women in designer dresses and men in tailored suits, all part of the Campbell social circle. Their perfumes mingled in the air, expensive and suffocating.
"You look pale, dear," whispered one woman, her eyes lingering on my expertly concealed cheek. "Are you feeling all right?"
"She's just nervous," Eleanor answered for me, her arm linked through mine in what would appear to onlookers as motherly affection but felt to me like shackles.
"Are you sure you want to go through with this?" Another woman leaned in, her voice dropping to a conspiratorial whisper. Her eyes held something I couldn't quite read—concern, perhaps, or morbid curiosity.
Before I could answer, Eleanor laughed lightly. "Cold feet is perfectly normal! But our Isabella has been waiting for this day for eight years, haven't you, dear?"
I nodded mechanically, scanning the crowd for a friendly face—my bridesmaids, my cousins, anyone who wasn't part of this suffocating charade.
"Where's Ryan?" someone asked, and I felt my heart stutter in my chest.
"He'll be here," Eleanor assured them, her grip on my arm tightening. "Just finishing up some last-minute patient care. So dedicated, my son."
The irony of her words made me want to scream.
* * *
The massive glass doors leading to the beach ceremony site loomed before me. Through them, I could see rows of white chairs filled with guests, the flower-adorned pergola, the ocean stretching endlessly beyond—a perfect setting for what should have been the happiest day of my life.
Instead, I stood frozen, a prisoner in my own wedding dress.
Then I saw him—my father, standing outside those glass doors, his palm pressed against the pane as if he could somehow reach through and pull me to safety. His eyes, so like my own, were wide with alarm and confusion. A security guard stood between us, blocking his entry.
"Papá," I whispered, my fingers instinctively reaching toward him.
"It's time," Eleanor announced, nodding to the wedding coordinator who stood poised to open the doors.
My father's mouth formed words I couldn't hear through the glass. He was arguing with the guard, gesturing frantically toward me. In his weathered face, I saw the dawning realization that something was terribly wrong.
The doors swung open. Music swelled. Heads turned to watch the bride's entrance.
Without my father's arm to steady me, I paused at the threshold of the red-carpeted aisle, my heart pounding so violently I thought it might break through my ribs. Eleanor nudged me forward.
"Walk," she commanded under her breath. "Everyone is watching."
I took one step, then another, my eyes fixed on my father's desperate face as the security guard held him back. Each step down the aisle felt like moving through quicksand, dragging me toward a future I no longer wanted, away from the people who truly loved me.
And then I saw him—Ryan, standing at the altar. But he wasn't alone.
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