Follow
Chapters
Share
Divorce After Wedding Woes Novel Cover

Divorce After Wedding Woes

The moment I stepped into the church in my white gown, I should have felt like the happiest woman alive. Instead, my stomach twisted with anxiety as I scanned the crowd for Beckett's reassuring smile. The organ music swelled around me, but something felt wrong—the whispers were too loud, the glances too pointed. Then I saw her. Emmy Walker stood in the third row, wearing a white dress that rivaled my own wedding gown. Her golden hair cascaded in perfect waves, and her smile held a secret I couldn't decipher. As our eyes met across the church, her lips curved into something that wasn't quite a smile. "Who invited her?" I whispered to Sarah, my maid of honor, who squeezed my hand in silent support. "I don't know, but ignore her. This is your day, Rose." But it wasn't just Emmy's inappropriate attire that unsettled me.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 2

The antiseptic smell hit me first, sharp and clinical, cutting through the fog of sedatives. My eyelids felt heavy as lead, but I forced them open to find myself staring at a stark white ceiling. The hospital room came into focus slowly—the IV drip beside my bed, the steady beep of monitors, the crushing weight of emptiness in my abdomen.

"Oh, you're awake." Emmy's voice drifted from the corner, sickeningly sweet. She sat in the visitor's chair beside an empty spot where Beckett should have been, her white dress from yesterday replaced by a soft pink sweater that made her look angelic. "I've been so worried about you."

I tried to speak, but my throat felt raw. The events of last night crashed back—the cramping, the blood, Emmy's intrusion into our bridal suite. My hand instinctively moved to my stomach, finding only the hollow ache of loss.

"The baby?" I whispered.

Emmy's face arranged itself into a mask of sympathetic sorrow. "Oh, Rose. I'm so sorry. The doctors said... well, these things happen sometimes. Especially with the stress of the wedding and everything."

I stared at her, unable to process her presence here while my husband was nowhere to be seen. "Where's Beckett?"

"He was here all night," she said, smoothing her skirt with delicate hands. "But he was just so upset, so devastated. I told him I'd stay with you while he went home to shower and change. He needed some comfort after such a shock."

Comfort. From her. While I lay here alone, processing the loss of our child.

"He'll be back soon," Emmy continued, her voice like honey over broken glass. "He's just having a hard time dealing with... well, you know how sensitive he is."

The door opened, and Beckett walked in, his hair still damp from the shower Emmy had mentioned. He looked tired, hollow-eyed, but there was something else in his expression—something cold and distant that made my chest tighten.

"You're awake," he said, not moving closer to the bed.

I reached for him, desperate for comfort, for some acknowledgment of our shared loss. "Beckett, the baby—"

"Don't." His voice cut through me like a blade. "Just don't."

Tears spilled down my cheeks. "I lost our baby. Our child is gone, and you're acting like—"

"Like what? Like I don't believe you?" He stepped closer, but not in comfort. His eyes were hard, accusatory. "Because I don't, Rose. I don't believe any of this."

The room spun around me. "What are you talking about?"

Emmy rose from her chair, moving to stand beside Beckett with practiced ease. She pulled a manila folder from her purse, her movements deliberate and theatrical.

"Rose," Beckett said, his voice deadly quiet, "were you ever actually pregnant?"

"Of course I was pregnant! How can you even ask me that?"

"Because Emmy found something." He took the folder from her hands. "Medical records. Your real medical records."

Emmy's voice was soft, understanding, perfectly pitched to sound reluctant. "I didn't want to believe it either, Beckett. But when I saw Rose's behavior at the wedding, how she seemed so... calculated about everything, I had to check. I have a friend who works in medical records, and she helped me verify..."

"Verify what?" I struggled to sit up, panic clawing at my throat.

Beckett opened the folder, his hands shaking slightly. "These show no record of pregnancy, Rose. No positive tests, no prenatal appointments. Nothing."

"That's impossible." My voice cracked. "I was pregnant. I felt the baby. I had morning sickness. I—"

"You had what you wanted to have," he said, his words falling like stones. "You trapped me into this marriage with a lie, didn't you? The whole pregnancy was fake. This miscarriage is just your way of covering it up now that you got what you wanted."

The accusation hit me like a physical blow. I stared at him, at this man I'd married less than twenty-four hours ago, watching him destroy me with Emmy's poison dripping from his lips.

"I would never—" I started, but he cut me off.

"The timing is convenient, isn't it? Right after Emmy's toast, right after everyone saw what we really have together. Suddenly you're having a medical emergency that gets you all the sympathy and attention."

Emmy placed a gentle hand on his arm, her touch possessive even in this moment of my devastation. She nodded sympathetically, as if she too was a victim of my supposed deception.

"I loved that baby," I whispered, the words torn from somewhere deep inside me. "I loved our baby, and I lost our baby, and you're standing there accusing me of—"

"Of lying. Of manipulation. Of trapping me into a marriage based on fraud." His voice was ice, and behind him, Emmy's eyes glittered with triumph masked as concern.

I closed my eyes, feeling something fundamental break inside me. When I opened them again, both Beckett and Emmy were watching me with identical expressions of pity and disgust.

"Get out," I whispered.

"Rose—" Beckett started.

"Get out!" The words tore from my throat, raw and desperate. "Both of you. Get out."

As they left together, Emmy's hand finding Beckett's arm in a gesture of comfort, I curled into myself on the hospital bed. The monitors continued their steady beeping, marking time in a world where my husband believed I was capable of faking a pregnancy, where my grief was seen as manipulation, where the woman who had orchestrated my humiliation was now his source of truth.

I pressed my hand to my empty stomach and wept for more than just the baby I'd lost.

You may also like

After My Husband Called For Ivy, I Canceled Our Marriage Novel Cover
9.7
On our wedding night, while my husband was showering, he suddenly shouted, "Ivy, can you bring me a pair of boxers?" I was about to get up and fetch them when I froze. Ivy isn't me. She's the one staying at our home—his female friend from the old gang. Before I could react, Ivy was already in the master bedroom, holding his boxers at her fingertips. She didn’t even bother to knock. Without acknowledging me, she walked straight to the bathroom door and quipped, "Hey! Open up, your old man sent you some black coffee!" How charming! My husband's father has been deceased for over a decade. Is this a haunting? In that case, maybe his dear old dad can kindly take the rotten potatoes away with him.
After My Husband Chose the Faker Over Me Novel Cover
9.1
The night air carried a chill that didn't match the warmth I'd expected from our third anniversary celebration. I stood in the shadows of our apartment rooftop garden, my hand instinctively moving to my slightly rounded belly—our baby, our future. The champagne flutes I'd brought up remained forgotten in my hands as I watched my husband Maddox and his childhood friend Elodie standing far too close by the edge, their silhouettes illuminated by the city lights below. "I don't know what to do anymore, Maddox," Elodie's voice trembled with practiced vulnerability. "The rumors Arielle has been spreading about me... they're destroying everything I've worked for." My breath caught in my throat. Rumors? I hadn't spoken to anyone about Elodie in weeks. "What exactly is she saying?" Maddox's voice was tender, protective in a way it hadn't been with me lately. "That I don't deserve my success, that I'm sleeping my way through the industry." A perfectly timed sob escaped her.
Betrayed at the Altar Novel Cover
9.0
The candlelight flickered across the cream-colored walls of the Plaza Hotel's bridal suite, casting dancing shadows that seemed to mimic the flutter of excitement in my chest. I smoothed my fingers over the handwritten vows in my lap, the elegant script a testament to three years of devotion. "I, Skylar Wheeler, take you, Davis Martinez..." I whispered the words aloud, practicing the moment I'd rehearsed countless times in my mind. My fingers instinctively reached for the jade pendant hanging around my neck—my grandfather Elijah's final gift before cancer claimed him. The cool stone felt reassuring against my skin. "Grandpa," I murmured, "if you could see me now. Tomorrow, I'll give this to Davis, just as you always wanted." The pendant had been in our family for generations, a symbol of protection and unconditional love. Grandpa had insisted it would bring me to the man who deserved my heart. For years, I'd clung to that promise, even when Davis's family faced financial ruin. Three years ago, I'd found Davis at his lowest—his family's empire crumbling, debts mounting into the millions.
Forsaken Bride: Deceived Into Love's Second Chance Novel Cover
7.1
To marry his first love, Deanna's husband of three years faked his death. Hiding behind his twin brother's identity, he and his family ran a cruel con. Her sobbing didn't move him. To impress that woman, he even had Deanna punished. As agony lit every nerve, she chose to walk away. With a sharp flick, she sent the ring into his face and wed a comatose tycoon, brushing off her ex's belated begging. A bleak future seemed certain-until the "coma" turned out to be an act. Under cover of night, her new husband pinned her down and murmured against her ear, "Baby, why don't we go another round?"
Married To My Toxic Ex-Boyfriend's Brother Novel Cover
7.0
Eleanore thought her fiancé, Johan, was her only salvation after her family went bankrupt. But at a high-society gala, he handed her a drugged glass of water. As the unnatural heat burned through her veins, the horrific truth hit her. Johan had isolated her and controlled her finances, all while secretly getting engaged to a wealthy heiress. He drugged Eleanore to ruin her completely, planning to lock her away as his helpless, secret mistress. Desperate and losing her mind to the drug, Eleanore fled down the hallway. With Johan and his bodyguards hunting her, she stumbled into the dark presidential suite. But she wasn't alone. Sitting on the leather sofa was Alexander Briggs—the most feared corporate raider on Wall Street, and Johan's exiled brother. Outside the door, Johan was screaming, ready to drag her back to hell. "I can be your antidote. But it's going to cost you." The ruthless billionaire looked at her trembling body with cold calculation. He offered her a staggering deal: a three-month fake marriage to destroy Johan's empire, and in return, absolute protection and her father's massive debts paid in full. She couldn't understand why the most powerful predator in New York would use a ruined girl as his weapon, but she knew she would rather die than let Johan touch her again. When Johan finally broke down the door to claim his prey, Alexander calmly pulled Eleanore into his arms. "Watch your mouth. You are speaking to my future wife."
She Left, and They Finally Saw Her Novel Cover
7.9
My son held the microphone at his seventh birthday party and said, "I wish Miss Lana could be my real mommy." Sixty guests. My in-laws. My husband's business partners. Everyone staring at me like I was the punchline of a joke I didn't know was being told. Miss Lana. His Pilates instructor. The one who brings him acai bowls after school and teaches him to call her "Mama L." I looked at my husband. He didn't even flinch. "He's just a kid, Wren. Don't make it weird." Don't make it weird. Seven years of 4 AM school lunches, ER runs with a screaming toddler, parent-teacher conferences he never showed up to. And I'm the one making it weird. That night I found the Threads DMs. Not sexts. Worse. Grocery lists. Inside jokes. Photos of my son asleep on her couch. She wasn't just sleeping with my husband. She was rehearsing my entire life. So I signed the papers. Packed one bag. Left the Malibu house, the Tesla, the joint accounts. Took nothing but my name. They thought I'd come crawling back in a week. Instead, I walked into a meeting at the most elite venture capital firm in Austin and pitched the startup I'd been quietly building for three years under a shell company. Seed round closed in eleven minutes. $14 million. My face hit the cover of Forbes Next. My ex-husband saw it first. Then my son's school friends' moms started whispering about it at pickup. Now my son cries into his iPad every night, begging Siri to call me. And my ex-husband? He fired Miss Lana. Moved out of our bedroom. Sits in my empty closet and smells the last hoodie I left behind. "Come home," he texts at 2 AM. Then 3 AM. Then 4. I don't respond. I'm busy. Building an empire. Falling for a man who actually sees me. Living the life they never thought I deserved. The woman they threw away? She was the entire foundation. And now the whole house is collapsing.