
Ending a Toxic Engagement
Chapter 1
The elegant bridal boutique buzzed with anticipation. Mirrors reflected the soft lighting from crystal chandeliers, casting a warm glow over racks of white perfection. I stood alone on the small circular platform, the delicate beadwork of my wedding gown catching the light as the seamstress knelt at my feet, pins between her lips.
"Turn please, Miss Edwards," she mumbled around the pins.
I rotated slowly, the heavy silk rustling against the carpet. My eyes drifted to the empty chair beside my father's assistant, where Dean should have been sitting. The clock on the wall showed he was now forty-five minutes late.
"I'm sure Mr. Patterson will be here any moment," the boutique owner said with practiced sympathy, checking her watch for the third time. "These final fittings are so important for the groom to see."
I forced a smile that didn't reach my eyes. "He's very busy with work."
The lie tasted bitter. Dean wasn't working. He was never working when he missed our appointments. The whispers among the staff grew louder as the minutes ticked by, their pitying glances making my cheeks burn.
My phone buzzed with a text from Sophie: *Still no sign of him?*
I typed back: *No. Cover for me with Dad if he asks.*
The boutique owner approached again, her professional smile strained. "Perhaps we should reschedule when Mr. Patterson can attend? The final fitting is traditionally when—"
"Please continue," I interrupted softly. "My fiancé won't be joining us today."
As the seamstress resumed her work, my phone lit up with an Instagram notification. One of Dean's friends had tagged him at the Olympus Spa downtown. The photo showed Dean's arm around a slender brunette—Eloise Hart—both wrapped in plush robes, champagne flutes in hand. The timestamp: twenty minutes ago.
My hands trembled as I quickly locked my screen, but not before the boutique owner caught a glimpse. Her eyes widened slightly before she busied herself with fabric swatches.
The humiliation burned deeper than anger. This wasn't the first time, nor would it be the last. The wedding preparations had become a series of empty chairs where Dean should have been, of explanations I shouldn't have had to make.
* * *
My mother's collapse came without warning. One moment she was arranging flowers in the sunroom, the next she was on the floor, her face ashen, one hand clutching her chest.
"Mom!" I screamed, dropping to my knees beside her. "Dad! Someone call an ambulance!"
The ride to the hospital passed in a blur of sirens and terror. In the ambulance, I clutched my mother's cold hand while frantically dialing Dean with my free one. Straight to voicemail. Again. And again.
Finally, a text: *Can't talk. In a meeting.*
My fingers shook as I typed: *Mom had a heart attack. We're heading to Seattle Memorial. Please come.*
Three dots appeared, disappeared, then reappeared: *Can't get away. Important matters.*
Something inside me cracked. I called him, desperation overriding dignity.
"Dean, please," I begged when he finally answered, his voice irritated. "The doctors say it's serious. I need you here."
"Mariam, I told you I'm busy," he snapped. In the background, I could hear soft music and the clink of glasses. "Your father's there, isn't he?"
"He's flying back from Tokyo. He won't make it in time if—" My voice broke.
"Handle it, Mariam. I'll check in later." He hung up.
I sat alone in the cold hospital waiting room as doctors worked to save my mother. When they emerged with grave faces, there was no hand holding mine, no shoulder to cry on. My mother died while Dean was ordering another bottle of wine for Eloise at Canlis restaurant, his "important matter" a romantic dinner with his mistress.
* * *
Three days after the funeral, I stood in Dean's study, searching for my mother's will. She'd mentioned important papers in his possession, and with Dad still drowning in grief, the responsibility fell to me.
The study was immaculate, all dark wood and leather, a room designed to impress rather than welcome. I rifled through the file cabinet, finding nothing. The desk drawers yielded only business documents until I reached the bottom drawer, locked but yielding to the spare key I knew he kept in the bookshelf.
Inside lay a thick folder labeled "Seraphine Island Project." Curious, I opened it to find architectural plans, property deeds, and bank transfers totaling millions. The private island off the Washington coast had been purchased six months ago, with construction already underway on a sprawling estate.
My breath caught as I flipped to the design notes: *"Ms. Hart prefers the master suite facing east for morning light..."* *"Wine cellar to include Ms. Hart's preferred vintages..."* *"Ensured privacy from neighboring properties as requested by Ms. Hart..."*
Every page confirmed what I'd suspected but never wanted to believe. Dean hadn't just been seeing Eloise—he'd been building her a paradise while I planned our wedding. While my mother lay dying and I begged for his presence, he'd been designing their future together.
The papers trembled in my hands, tears blurring the ink. All those missed appointments, all those "important matters"—they had a name. Eloise Hart. And she was worth millions to him, worth more than my mother's final moments, worth more than my dignity or happiness.
I carefully replaced the folder, locked the drawer, and walked out of the study with something new hardening inside me. Not just heartbreak. Resolve.
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