
Betrayed at the Altar, Rescued on Love Island
Chapter 2
Three days after we buried my mother, I found myself standing outside the Baker mansion. The funeral had been a blur of black dresses and whispered condolences, none of which could fill the void her death had created. Tyler had been there, standing at a respectful distance, his face a mask of appropriate grief. He hadn't tried to touch me, hadn't offered comfort beyond hollow words.
I needed answers. I needed the truth.
The housekeeper recognized me and let me in without announcement. I found Lilian in the sunroom, casually sipping tea as if nothing had happened. As if she hadn't destroyed my life and contributed to my mother's death.
"Lilian," I said, my voice steadier than I expected. "We need to talk."
She looked up, her expression one of practiced innocence. "Veda. What a surprise."
"I want you to tell everyone the truth about those sketches," I said, stepping closer. "Tell them they were fabricated. Tell them you planned this whole thing to ruin me."
Lilian's eyes narrowed slightly, but her voice remained sweet. "The truth? The truth is that you orchestrated everything for attention, Veda. You always were the center of your own little drama."
"That's not true," I whispered, my hands clenching into fists. "You know it's not true."
"Isn't it?" She set down her teacup with deliberate care. "You've always been jealous of Tyler's attention to me. Always felt threatened by our bond."
I felt a presence behind me and turned to see Tyler standing in the doorway. His eyes met mine briefly before sliding away.
"Tyler," I pleaded, "tell her to stop this. Tell her to tell the truth."
He said nothing. His silence was worse than any words could have been.
"She can't tell the truth," Lilian said, rising from her chair. "Because it would mean admitting what kind of person you really are."
I looked between them, these two people who had been part of my life for so long, and felt something inside me break.
---
Sleep eluded me that night. I wandered the halls of Tyler's mansion—where I was still staying, trapped by social expectations and my own inability to face the world—restless and haunted by grief.
The grandfather clock in the hallway struck two. I paused outside Tyler's study, hearing voices within. The door was slightly ajar, a thin line of light spilling into the dark corridor.
"It went perfectly," Lilian's voice drifted out. "You played your part so well, Tyler."
"I did what needed to be done," Tyler replied, his voice low but clear. "She needed to learn her place."
My blood ran cold as I pressed closer to the door, straining to hear every word.
"Did you see her face when those sketches appeared?" Lilian laughed softly. "All that work paid off. Mother was right—you need someone who understands your position, not some naive little girl who thinks love is enough."
"She'll come around," Tyler said. "Once she's learned her lesson."
"You're too soft on her," Lilian replied. "But I suppose that's what makes this work. Your pretend devotion is almost convincing."
"It's not pretend," Tyler said, but there was something in his voice—a hesitation, a calculation—that made my stomach turn. "I do care for her. But she needed to be tested. She needed to learn humility."
"And now she has," Lilian said. "You were right to let me handle this. A woman understands these things better."
I backed away from the door, my heart pounding so loudly I feared they would hear it. The truth was worse than anything I could have imagined. Tyler hadn't just failed to protect me—he had been part of the conspiracy all along.
---
The next morning, I made my decision.
I couldn't stay. I couldn't remain in a world where the man I had loved since childhood had betrayed me so completely. Where the woman who had been like a sister to me had orchestrated my downfall with such precision.
But where could I go? Who could I trust?
I thought of the whispered conversations at funerals and charity galas, the names that came up when people discussed sensitive situations requiring discretion. There was one name that surfaced repeatedly: Ricardo Washington.
A businessman known for handling delicate matters for wealthy families. A man who could make problems disappear and create new identities when needed.
I didn't know much about him beyond what gossip provided—that he was powerful, discreet, and operated in the gray areas of the law when necessary. But at this moment, he represented something I desperately needed: a way out.
As I packed a small bag of essentials, I realized I was leaving behind everything I had known. But after what I had discovered, perhaps that was the only way forward.
You may also like





