
Escaping Wedding Humiliation
Chapter 3
The morning light filtered through the grand windows of Kleinfeld Bridal, casting a golden glow across the showroom floor. I stood before a three-way mirror, barely recognizing the woman who stared back at me. For the first time in two years, I wasn't trying on a wedding dress to please Nathaniel Sterling. This gown—a sleek, ivory sheath with delicate beading along the neckline—was for me. For my future with Alexander.
"It's perfect," I whispered, running my fingers along the smooth fabric. No princess ball gown, no cathedral train, none of the extravagant details Nathaniel had insisted upon for his spectacles of humiliation. This dress was elegant in its simplicity. It represented everything my new beginning should be: clean, uncomplicated, free from the weight of the past.
The bridal consultant smiled, adjusting the straps with practiced hands. "You look stunning, Ms. Martinez. A complete departure from your previous styles."
I caught her eye in the mirror. "That's exactly the point."
The bell above the boutique door chimed, and I felt a chill run down my spine before I even turned around. Some instincts you develop after being hunted for sport by the New York elite. Some predators you can sense before you see them.
"Isabella! What a delightful coincidence."
Victoria Ashford's voice dripped with false sweetness as she glided across the showroom floor, her Louboutins clicking against the marble. She wore a cream-colored Chanel suit that made her look like she was playing dress-up in her mother's clothes—trying too hard, as always.
"Victoria." I kept my voice neutral, though my heart hammered against my ribs. "I wasn't aware you had an appointment today."
"Oh, I don't." She circled me slowly, her eyes traveling up and down my form with calculated assessment. "I was just passing by and saw you through the window. Couldn't resist coming in to say hello to New York's most persistent bride." Her smile didn't reach her eyes. "Dress number one hundred?"
The bridal consultant shifted uncomfortably beside me, clearly sensing the tension crackling in the air.
"Something like that," I replied, turning back to my reflection. I wouldn't give her the satisfaction of seeing me rattled.
"Hmm." Victoria moved closer, her perfume—too strong, too sweet—invading my space. "It's... simple, isn't it? Almost plain. But I suppose after ninety-nine failures, one stops trying so hard."
I met her gaze in the mirror. "Or perhaps one realizes that the dress was never the problem."
Something dangerous flashed in her eyes. "No, the problem was always you, wasn't it? The woman who killed his sister and still expected a happily ever after."
The words struck like physical blows, but I'd heard them too many times to flinch anymore. "Is there something specific you wanted, Victoria? Besides poisoning my fitting with your presence?"
Her smile widened, becoming almost manic. "Just to give you a wedding gift."
It happened so quickly I had no time to react. Victoria's hand emerged from behind her back, a crystal flute of deep red wine clutched in her manicured fingers. With a fluid, practiced motion, she hurled the contents across the bodice of my gown.
The liquid splashed across the ivory fabric like blood, immediately seeping into the delicate material. Crimson rivulets ran down the front of the dress, staining everything they touched.
"Oops," Victoria whispered, her eyes alight with malicious triumph. "How clumsy of me."
The bridal consultant gasped in horror. "Ms. Ashford! What have you done?"
Something snapped inside me—a dam breaking after holding back two years of humiliation and pain. I stepped down from the pedestal, the ruined dress trailing behind me.
"You pathetic, insecure little girl," I said, my voice low and steady. "Is this what you've been reduced to? Destroying dresses because you know you'll never measure up to what I was to him?"
Victoria's smile faltered. "What you were? Past tense, darling. I'm what he wants now. I'm who he's choosing."
"Is he? Or is he just using you the way he's been using me—as a prop in his revenge fantasy?" I moved closer, refusing to back down. "He doesn't love you, Victoria. He's not capable of love anymore. I destroyed that part of him—or at least, that's what he believes."
Fury contorted her features. "You know nothing about what Nathaniel feels for me."
"I know everything about Nathaniel Sterling," I countered. "Including the fact that he'll discard you the moment you're no longer useful to his vendetta."
Victoria's hand flew up, poised to strike my face—but she froze mid-motion, her eyes fixed on something over my shoulder. A slow, satisfied smile spread across her lips as she lowered her arm and instead reached for her phone.
She turned the screen toward me. Nathaniel's face filled the display, his expression cold and hard as granite. A live video call.
"That's enough, Isabella," he said, his voice sending ice through my veins despite the digital distance between us. "Security will escort you out now."
As if summoned by his words, two men in black suits appeared at the entrance to the fitting room.
"Mr. Sterling has requested you leave the premises immediately, Ms. Martinez," the taller one stated without emotion.
Victoria's soft clapping punctuated my humiliation as the guards moved toward me. "You see, Isabella? You'll always be his broken trophy. And I'll always be the one he chooses."
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