
After My Groom Humiliated Me, I Took His Brother
Chapter 1
The heavy mahogany door of the Plaza Hotel’s bridal suite clicked shut behind me. The sound was too loud, too final. I reached for the brass handle, my fingers slipping against the polished metal. Locked. From the outside.
"Ridge?" I called out, my voice trembling against the suffocating silence of the room. The cloying scent of white lilies and expensive champagne suddenly turned my stomach.
A shadow shifted in the corner. My breath hitched, the boning of my custom Vera Wang gown digging mercilessly into my ribs. Sitting in a velvet armchair, clutching a crystal tumbler with both hands, was Damian. Damian Miller. Ridge’s older, "brain-damaged" half-brother. The man high society whispered about with pity and thinly veiled disgust. He was staring blankly at the wall, rocking slightly.
A sharp crackle of static echoed from the smart-speaker on the nightstand.
"Is the bride getting comfortable?" Ridge’s voice slithered through the room, distorted by the speaker but unmistakably his.
Before I could process the shock, a high, breathy giggle followed. Maci. Maci Turner, his so-called 'assistant'.
"Ridge, what is this?" I demanded, my fingernails biting into my palms. The heat in my chest was rising, a toxic mix of panic and disbelief. "Open this door."
"Oh, but sweetheart, this is your wedding night," Ridge drawled, a cruel amusement lacing his words. "Maci and I thought you needed a lesson in humility. You’ve been so terribly arrogant lately, Sophia. So... demanding. Spend the night with the family fool. Prove your absolute submission to me, and maybe I’ll let you out in the morning."
Another giggle from Maci. "Make sure you get a good look at him, Sophia. It’s exactly what you deserve."
The speaker clicked off. The red light faded to black. I was trapped.
My chest tightened. The room began to spin. Ten years of devotion, of molding myself into the perfect Scott family bride, reduced to a sick, twisted joke for his mistress's entertainment. A sob clawed its way up my throat. I sank to the plush carpet, my silk skirts billowing around me like a collapsed parachute. The panic attack hit like a physical blow, stealing the oxygen from my lungs. My vision blurred as I gasped for air.
Then, the rhythmic creaking of the armchair stopped.
I looked up through watery eyes. Damian was standing over me. The slack-jawed, vacant expression that defined his public existence was gone. His posture was perfectly straight, his shoulders broad beneath his tailored tuxedo. But it was his eyes that stole the remaining breath from my lungs. They were sharp, lucid, and burning with an intense, terrifying clarity.
He knelt, his movements fluid and precise. From his breast pocket, he withdrew a pristine white handkerchief and pressed it into my trembling hand. Beneath the linen was a hard piece of plastic. A master keycard.
"You don't have to be a victim of their cruelty, Sophia," he whispered. His voice was a low, resonant baritone, entirely devoid of the childish slur he had faked for over two decades. "The door is yours to open."
I stared at him, my mind short-circuiting. The family idiot was a phantom. A masterpiece of deception. And in his dark, calculating eyes, I saw something that mirrored the sudden, violent spark igniting in my own chest: vengeance.
I gripped the keycard. The tears stopped. The panic evaporated, replaced by a cold, crystalline rage.
I didn't run. I marched.
The master keycard flashed green, and I pushed the heavy mahogany doors open, leaving the suite behind. I descended the grand staircase of the Plaza, the heavy silk train of my gown dragging behind me like a war banner. Adrenaline numbed my shaking legs.
I burst through the double doors of the grand ballroom. Inside, three hundred of New York’s most elite power-players were sipping Dom Pérignon. The jazz band was playing a soft rendition of "At Last."
I walked straight to the stage. The crowd parted, murmurs rippling through the sea of tuxedos and designer gowns. Ridge was standing near the ice sculpture, his arm casually brushing against Maci’s waist. When he saw me, the smug satisfaction drained from his face, replaced by a sickly pallor.
I climbed the steps and grabbed the microphone from the singer's hands. The feedback whined, a sharp screech that silenced the room instantly.
"Ladies and gentlemen," I projected, my voice steady, echoing off the crystal chandeliers. "I apologize for interrupting the celebration. But I have an announcement regarding my groom."
Ridge took a step forward, his jaw clenching. "Sophia, put the mic down."
"Ridge Scott," I continued, my gaze locking onto his terrified eyes, "just locked me in the bridal suite with his mentally impaired brother. He did this to entertain his mistress, Maci Turner, who is currently standing right beside him."
A collective gasp shattered the silence. Maci physically recoiled, her face turning crimson. Ridge stepped back, his hands raised in a pathetic attempt at damage control.
"But Ridge miscalculated," I said, my voice dropping an octave, slicing through the room like a blade. "I am not his victim. Nor am I his wife. The wedding is off."
I looked toward the ballroom entrance. Damian stood there, his shoulders hunched, his eyes wide and vacant once more—the perfect picture of the simpleton.
"In fact," I declared, pointing straight at him, "if I am going to marry a Scott tonight, I choose the better man. I am taking Damian as my husband."
The silence was deafening. I dropped the microphone. It hit the stage with a heavy, satisfying thud.
I gathered my skirts and walked down the center aisle, my head held high. I didn't look at Ridge. I didn't look at Maci. I walked straight to Damian, took his hand, and led the 'fool' out of the ballroom, leaving the ashes of the Scott family's reputation burning in my wake.
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