
Abandoned at the Altar: Choosing Self Over Love
Chapter 2
I sat on my living room floor, surrounded by the remnants of what should have been my perfect day. Wedding contracts scattered around me like fallen leaves—the venue agreement with its bold letterhead promising "Your Dream Wedding," the florist's detailed sketches of centerpieces I'd agonized over for weeks, seating charts with careful handwriting marking where each guest would sit to witness our vows.
My fingers traced the edge of the catering contract. Forty-seven thousand dollars for the reception alone. I'd worked overtime for six months to save that money, skipping lunches and canceling weekend plans. The dress hanging in my closet had cost another eight thousand—a sum that now felt like a cruel joke.
Every paper told the same story: Sarah Torres, the woman who'd believed so completely in forever that she'd invested her entire savings into one perfect day. The irony tasted bitter in my mouth.
I picked up the timeline I'd created, color-coded and laminated because I'd wanted everything to run smoothly. "2:30 PM - Bride's final touch-ups." "3:00 PM - Processional begins." "3:15 PM - Exchange of vows." The schedule ended at "11:00 PM - Send-off with sparklers." There was no entry for "3:05 PM - Four-year-old nephew destroys bride's life."
My phone buzzed with another text from Madison: "Sarah, please call me back. I'm worried about you."
I'd been ignoring calls for three days now, existing on crackers and the bottle of wine I'd been saving for our wedding night. The irony wasn't lost on me.
As I shuffled through the papers, memories crashed over me like waves. How Alicia had "accidentally" bumped into us at the cake tasting, suggesting Ocean might enjoy the vanilla option more than my chosen chocolate raspberry. How she'd shown up at the venue walkthrough, claiming Miles had asked her to check if it was "child-friendly" for Ocean. How Miles had defended every intrusion with the same words: "She's family, Sarah. She's been through so much."
I should have seen it then. The way her eyes lingered on Miles when she thought no one was looking. The way she touched his arm when speaking. The way Ocean had started calling him "Daddy" months ago, and Miles had never corrected him.
My chest tightened as I remembered the moment that should have been my wake-up call. Two months before the wedding, I'd found Alicia trying on my veil in the bridal shop. She'd claimed she was "just curious" about how it would look, but the expression on her face—satisfied, possessive—had chilled me to the bone.
"You looked beautiful in it," I'd said, because I'd been raised to be polite, to smooth over uncomfortable moments.
"Did I?" she'd asked, turning to study herself in the mirror. "Miles always said I'd make a beautiful bride."
The words had felt like a slap, but when I'd mentioned it to Miles later, he'd brushed it off. "She's grieving, Sarah. She's probably thinking about her wedding with David. You're reading too much into it."
Always an excuse. Always a reason why I should understand, forgive, accommodate.
Three weeks later, I sat in Dr. Martinez's office, staring at the ultrasound image in my trembling hands. The tiny blob on the screen looked like a miracle—a second chance, a new beginning.
"Congratulations, Ms. Torres," Dr. Martinez had said with a warm smile. "You're about six weeks along. Everything looks healthy."
My heart had soared for the first time since the wedding disaster. This baby could be our fresh start. Miles would see that we were meant to be a family. He'd remember why he'd fallen in love with me.
I'd called him immediately, my fingers shaking as I dialed.
"Sarah?" His voice sounded distracted, distant. "I'm actually at Ocean's school play right now. Can this wait?"
"Miles, I need to tell you something important—"
"Look, whatever it is, we'll talk later, okay? Ocean's about to go on stage, and Alicia's really nervous. I promised I'd be here for them."
The line went dead before I could say another word.
I'd sat in the parking lot of the doctor's office for an hour, the ultrasound photo growing damp from my tears. Even now, carrying his child, I came second to Alicia's needs.
The morning sickness started the next day, violent and relentless. I'd wake up retching, barely making it to the bathroom in time. My body felt foreign, exhausted, like it was fighting a war I couldn't win.
Miles called that evening, his voice casual and unaware.
"Sorry about earlier. Ocean did great in his play. What did you want to talk about?"
But by then, the moment had passed. The joy I'd felt holding that ultrasound had curdled into something bitter and desperate.
"Nothing important," I'd lied. "It can wait."
Because if he couldn't prioritize one phone call from his former fiancée, how could I trust him to prioritize our child?
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