
After My Groom Abandoned Me, His Rival Married Me
Chapter 2
The stranger's hand was warm and steady as he guided me through the sea of stunned faces. My wedding dress rustled against the chairs, the train catching on someone's purse. I didn't stop to free it. Three hundred pairs of eyes burned into my back, but all I could focus on was the firm pressure of his fingers against my elbow.
"Olivia, what are you doing?" My mother's voice cracked behind us. "This is insane!"
I couldn't answer her. Couldn't explain that marrying a stranger seemed less insane than standing at that altar, abandoned and humiliated, while everyone whispered about poor Olivia Bennett who couldn't keep her man.
The stranger—my husband now, technically—led me through the Plaza's marble lobby. Staff members froze mid-task, watching our bizarre procession. A bellhop dropped a stack of luggage. The concierge's mouth hung open.
"There's a car waiting," he said, his voice low and calm, as if escorting runaway brides was perfectly normal.
Outside, a sleek black Mercedes idled at the curb. He opened the door for me, helping me gather the yards of silk and tulle. I sank into the leather seat, my hands trembling in my lap.
He slid in beside me, giving the driver a quiet instruction before turning to face me. In the afternoon sunlight, I could see him clearly for the first time. Dark hair, perfectly styled. Eyes the color of storm clouds. A face that belonged on magazine covers, not in the back row of my disaster of a wedding.
"I'm Ethan," he said simply. "Ethan Blackwood."
"Why?" The word scraped out of my throat. "Why would you—"
"No one should face that alone." His gaze held mine, intense and strangely familiar. "We can have this annulled tomorrow, next week, whenever you want. But I couldn't just sit there and watch."
My phone buzzed incessantly in my clutch. Chloe. My parents. Mark's mother. I turned it off.
"Where are we going?"
"Somewhere you can breathe."
The car glided through Manhattan traffic, eventually turning toward a private airfield I didn't know existed. A gleaming jet waited on the tarmac, its stairs already lowered.
"I can't—" I started, but he was already helping me out of the car.
"You planned a honeymoon, didn't you?" His voice was gentle. "The Hamptons. Ocean views. A week to start your new life."
My breath caught. How could he possibly know that?
"Security mentioned it when they did background for the wedding," he explained, reading my expression. "The Plaza takes their high-profile events seriously."
It made sense, but something in his eyes suggested there was more to the story.
The jet's interior was all cream leather and polished wood. I collapsed into a seat, still in my wedding dress, feeling like I'd stumbled into someone else's life. Ethan sat across from me, maintaining a respectful distance.
"Why were you at my wedding?" I asked as the engines hummed to life.
"Business connection with your father's firm." He loosened his tie slightly. "I almost didn't come."
"But you did."
"I did."
The flight was mercifully short. When we landed, another car waited to whisk us to a resort I recognized from hours spent browsing their website. The same oceanfront property where Mark and I should have been checking in as newlyweds.
The staff greeted us with knowing smiles that faltered when they saw my shell-shocked expression and the careful distance Ethan maintained.
"We have the honeymoon suite prepared—" the manager began.
"Two suites," Ethan corrected smoothly. "Adjacent, if possible."
Relief flooded through me. This beautiful stranger who'd married me on impulse was also a gentleman.
My suite was paradise—floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking the Atlantic, a bathroom bigger than my apartment's kitchen, a bed that could sleep six. I stood at the window, still in my wedding dress, watching the sun paint the ocean gold.
A soft knock interrupted my daze. Ethan stood in the doorway, having changed into casual clothes that probably cost more than my wedding dress.
"Dinner?" he offered. "Or would you prefer to be alone?"
I looked down at myself, at the dress that represented everything I'd lost. "I don't have anything else to wear."
"The boutique downstairs can send up some options. Whatever you need."
An hour later, wearing a simple sundress that appeared like magic, I met him on the restaurant's terrace. The ocean breeze carried away some of the day's surreal weight.
We ate in comfortable silence until he set down his wine glass and met my eyes.
"Olivia," he said quietly, "there's something you should know. About Mark."
My stomach clenched. "Please, I can't—"
"He's been seeing Victoria for eight months." The words fell between us like stones. "The pregnancy was deliberate. Her way of forcing his hand."
The wine glass slipped from my fingers, shattering on the stone terrace. Eight months. While I planned our wedding, while I supported his dreams, while I loved him—eight months of lies.
"How do you know this?"
Ethan's expression was unreadable in the twilight. "Sometimes the worst betrayals come from the people we trust most."
As waiters rushed to clean the broken glass, I stared at this stranger who knew more about my life than I did. Who was Ethan Blackwood, really? And why did I feel like our impromptu marriage was anything but random?
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