
Abandoned at the Altar
Chapter 3
I chose the café on Fifth Street deliberately—public enough that Preston would have to control his reaction, intimate enough for a conversation that would change everything. The morning sun streamed through the tall windows as I claimed a corner table, my fingers wrapped around a cup of tea I couldn't bring myself to drink. The pregnancy test sat hidden in my purse, a small plastic harbinger of hope and terror.
I'd rehearsed the words a hundred times. "Preston, I have something wonderful to tell you." Or maybe, "We're going to have a baby." Simple. Direct. Life-changing.
Through the window, I spotted his familiar silhouette approaching from across the street. My heart lifted for the first time in weeks—until I saw her. Angelique walked beside him, one manicured hand resting on a luxury stroller, the other tucked into the crook of Preston's arm. She was radiant in the way new mothers are supposed to be, her blonde hair catching the sunlight, her designer dress perfectly fitted despite having given birth just weeks ago.
But it was Preston's face that destroyed me. He was laughing at something she'd said, his entire expression soft and unguarded in a way I hadn't seen since before this nightmare began. As I watched, frozen behind the glass, he leaned down and pressed his lips to her temple—not a perfunctory kiss, but something tender, intimate, real.
The carefully constructed hope I'd been nursing crumbled like ash.
Preston appeared in the café doorway moments later, alone now, scanning the room until his eyes found mine. He approached with that familiar smile, the one that used to make my knees weak and now just made me feel sick.
"Ruby." He slid into the seat across from me, reaching for my hands. "You look beautiful. I've missed you so much."
I pulled my hands back, placing them flat on the table. The rehearsed words died in my throat, replaced by something raw and desperate. Without speaking, I reached into my purse and placed the pregnancy test on the white tablecloth between us.
Preston's face went through a series of transformations—confusion, recognition, then a pallor so complete he looked like he might faint. The silence stretched between us, thick and suffocating, while other café patrons chatted and laughed around us, oblivious to the world imploding at table seven.
"Ruby." His voice came out as a whisper. "Ruby, no. Please tell me this is—this can't be right."
"Six weeks," I said quietly. "The doctor confirmed it yesterday."
Preston's hands flew to his hair, gripping it like he wanted to pull it out. His eyes darted around the café as if looking for escape routes. "Ruby, you can't—this is terrible timing. My family—Angelique just had our son—how could you let this happen?"
The words hit me like a physical blow. I actually flinched backward in my chair, staring at this man I'd loved for three years, this man whose child was growing inside me, as he asked how I could "let this happen."
"Let this happen?" My voice was barely controlled. "It takes two people to make a baby, Preston. Or did you forget that part when you were playing happy family with your wife?"
"She's not my wife yet," he hissed, leaning forward. "The ceremony isn't until next month. Ruby, you have to understand—this complicates everything. My mother, the board, the succession plan—"
"I'm keeping the baby." The words came out steady, final. "With or without you."
Preston's face flushed red. He reached across the table and grabbed my arm—not violently, but with a desperate firmness that made my skin crawl. "You don't understand what this means for me. What I've sacrificed. What my family will do if they find out. Ruby, please, we need to handle this quietly, before anyone—"
"Handle this?" I wrenched my arm free, standing so abruptly my chair scraped against the floor. "You mean get rid of it. Get rid of our baby."
"Ruby, wait—" Preston half-rose from his seat, panic written across his features.
But I was already walking away, my heels clicking against the hardwood floor with each decisive step. Behind me, I could hear him calling my name, but I didn't turn around. I couldn't. If I looked back at his face—at the fear and calculation where joy should have been—I might actually break apart right there in front of everyone.
The next week became a siege. My phone buzzed constantly with his calls and texts, a manic symphony of apologies and manipulation. "I was shocked, that's all. Give me time to process this." "You're the love of my life. We can figure this out." "My family doesn't have to know right away."
Expensive packages appeared at my door—Cartier jewelry I'd never wear, designer baby clothes in soft pastels, imported chocolates that tasted like guilt. I left them all unopened, creating a monument to his desperation in my hallway.
Two weeks after that disastrous café meeting, someone knocked on my apartment door with an authority that made my blood run cold. Through the peephole, I saw her—Victoria Kelley, Preston's mother, standing in my hallway like she owned it.
I opened the door with my chin raised, determined not to show weakness.
"Mrs. Kelley." I stepped aside to let her enter, though every instinct screamed at me to slam the door in her face.
She swept into my modest living room, her critical gaze taking inventory of my furniture, my books, my life. When I offered tea, she declined with a dismissive wave.
"I'll make this brief, Miss Andrews." Victoria settled into my armchair as if it were a throne, her posture rigid with authority. "Your pregnancy threatens my family's carefully orchestrated succession plan and undermines Angelique's position as the mother of the legitimate heir."
She reached into her designer handbag and withdrew a check, placing it on my coffee table with the precision of a chess move. The amount—two million dollars—made my vision blur.
"Terminate the pregnancy and disappear from Preston's life," she continued, her voice as cold as winter steel. "This is a generous offer, Miss Andrews. More than generous."
I stared at the check, at the casual way she'd just offered to buy my child's life, to erase me like an inconvenient stain. Something crystallized inside me—not anger, but something harder, more permanent.
I picked up the check, and for a moment, Victoria's lips curved into a satisfied smile.
Then I tore it in half. Then in half again.
The pieces fluttered to the floor like snow.
"Get out of my apartment," I said quietly.
Victoria's composure cracked for just a moment—surprise flickering across her aristocratic features before the mask slammed back into place. She stood, smoothing her skirt, and walked toward my door with measured steps.
At the threshold, she paused.
"You should have taken the money, Miss Andrews." Her voice carried the weight of absolute certainty. "My family doesn't make the same offer twice."
The door closed behind her with a soft click that sounded like a death knell.
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