
His 99th Excuse, My Empty Aisle
His 99th Excuse, My Empty Aisle Chapter 1
Father Thomas cleared his throat. The low sound carried easily into the vaulted ceiling of the sanctuary. He opened his leather-bound book of vows and looked up.
"Miss Vance," the priest whispered, leaning over the wooden pulpit. "We are fifteen minutes past the hour. Have we received any word from the groom?"
I gripped my phone tighter. "Give him another minute."
Harper shifted her weight on the altar step. Her taffeta bridesmaid dress rustled loudly in the suffocating quiet. "Hazel, two hundred people are staring at us. Where the hell is Julian?"
"He said he was stuck on the highway," I replied, refusing to break eye contact with the empty space beside me.
"On the highway?" Liam scoffed from the opposite side of the altar. "I checked the traffic apps. The interstate is completely clear."
"Liam, keep your mouth shut," Harper snapped, stepping closer to me. "Call him again, Hazel."
"I already called him six times."
"Then send another text."
"I have sent ninety-eight texts, Harper. He is ignoring all of them."
"Father Thomas," I said, my voice tight. "What time does your watch say exactly?"
The priest checked his wrist. "It is exactly two-fifteen, Miss Vance."
"He is fifteen minutes late."
"Maybe he got lost," Harper offered blindly.
"He grew up two streets away from this church," I told her. "He walked these exact sidewalks every day for ten years."
"Traffic is a nightmare downtown," Liam argued defensively from his spot.
"On a Sunday morning?" I challenged him. "Try a different excuse, Liam."
"Look, Julian is a good guy. He would never just ditch you. Give the guy a break."
"I am standing at the altar in a fifty-pound dress, Liam. I am out of breaks to give."
The tight fishbone corset of my bridal gown dug fiercely into my ribs. The restriction made my lungs burn. I tried to pull in a deep breath, but the structured bodice refused to yield an inch.
"Perhaps we should make a brief announcement," Father Thomas suggested. "We could offer the guests some refreshments while we wait?"
"No." I squeezed the stems of my bouquet. "We wait right here."
"Hazel, this is utterly humiliating," Harper muttered. "He left you standing at the altar."
"He would never do that."
My phone vibrated violently against my palm. The bright screen flared to life, cutting through the dim, stained-glass lighting of the church.
A new message from Julian.
*Chloe got into a car accident. She is completely terrified and refuses to release my hand. Push the ceremony back two hours. I will be there as soon as she calms down. I am so sorry.*
My thumb hovered over the glowing words. I read the notification once. Then twice.
"Is it him?" Liam asked, stepping forward to invade my space.
"Yes," I answered. My voice sounded hollow, like it belonged to a stranger.
Harper grabbed my forearm. "Read the message aloud, Hazel."
"No."
"Hazel, tell me what he wrote," Harper demanded, her nails pinching my skin.
I swallowed the dry lump in my throat. "He says Chloe got into a car accident."
"Is she dead?" Harper asked bluntly.
"No. She is completely terrified. She refuses to release his hand."
"You have got to be kidding me." Harper's jaw dropped open. "She stole him on your wedding day?"
"He wants to push the ceremony back two hours," I continued, staring blankly at the words on my screen. "He promised to be here as soon as she calms down."
"Did he apologize?" Liam asked.
"Yes."
"See?" Liam threw his hands in the air. "He is sorry. It is an emergency."
"A minor fender bender is not an emergency," Harper shouted. "A wedding is a once-in-a-lifetime event!"
"For how long does he want to delay?" Father Thomas asked, lowering his book.
"Two hours."
"Two hours?" The priest shook his head firmly. "We have the Romero baptism scheduled for three o'clock. I lack the authority to hold the sanctuary that long."
"Why does he need two hours?" Liam asked, pulling out his own phone. "Did his engine fail?"
I stared at the pristine white roses in my hands. "Chloe was in an accident."
Harper gasped again. "Is she in the hospital?"
"She is scared." I applied brutal pressure to the thick green stems. "He needs to stay by her side until she stops crying."
"Are you serious right now?" Harper spat. "His ex-girlfriend gets into a fender bender, and he abandons his bride at the altar?"
"She is his business partner," Liam corrected.
"She is a manipulative snake who ruins every single milestone in Hazel's life!" Harper shouted.
The stems of the roses snapped completely in my fist.
A thick, sticky green sap oozed from the broken plants. The dark liquid smeared directly across my pure white satin gloves, staining the immaculate fabric. My stomach rolled violently. A severe wave of nausea hit me, twisting my insides into knots.
Then, the sickness vanished entirely, replaced by absolute, freezing ice.
"Hazel?" Harper touched my shoulder. "What do you want to do?"
"Tell the guests to go home," I commanded, tossing the ruined bouquet onto the marble floor.
"You are overreacting," Liam argued. "Julian said to push it two hours. He will be here."
"I refuse to wait two hours for a man who prioritizes another woman on our wedding day."
"He is just trying to be a decent person," Liam insisted, his jaw tightening. "Chloe has nobody else in this city."
"She has car insurance," I replied flatly. "And she has a phone to call a tow truck."
"Miss Vance," Father Thomas interjected, closing his vow book with a soft thud. "Marriage requires great patience. Perhaps we should pause and pray."
"Father, with all due respect, save your prayers." I reached up and grabbed the edge of my intricately laced veil.
"What are you doing?" Harper asked.
"Leaving."
I yanked the tulle fabric hard. The metal combs scraped sharply against my scalp, pulling loose several carefully pinned curls. I tossed the sheer white material away from me. It landed softly on the crimson velvet cushion meant for our kneeling prayers.
I turned my back on the empty altar.
Two hundred faces stared back at me from the wooden pews. The silence felt heavy, suffocating my chest. Then, the loud whispers erupted.
"Where is the groom?"
"Did she just throw her veil?"
"I told you this relationship would fail."
"Look at her hands, is that green paint?"
I kept my chin raised and locked my eyes squarely on the exit. I marched down the red carpet, dragging the heavy silk train behind my legs.
"Hazel, stop!" Liam yelled from the front of the church.
I ignored his voice entirely.
"Do not follow her, Liam," Harper ordered sharply.
The church aisle felt endlessly long. Every step required monumental effort against the tight constraints of the heavy gown. The murmurs grew louder as I passed the middle rows. Relatives I barely knew gaped openly.
"Mrs. Croft," I said softly, addressing Julian's mother as she blocked my path in the aisle.
"Hazel, sweetheart," she pleaded, her face pale as a ghost. "Do not do this. Julian loves you."
"He loves Chloe," I corrected.
"He feels responsible for her," Mrs. Croft insisted, her fingers digging into my arm. "You know her history. You know she struggles."
"Today is my wedding day, Mrs. Croft. I refuse to compete with her today."
"Just wait the two hours," she begged. "The catering is already paid for. The band is here."
"Then feed the guests and let them dance," I suggested, pulling my arm away from her grip. "But I will not be joining them."
"You are making a massive mistake!" she raised her voice.
"Julian made the mistake," I answered, stepping around her.
"Excuse me," I said to an usher who had stepped into the aisle.
He quickly moved aside, pressing his back against a pew.
I reached the vestibule. The heavy, carved wooden doors stood closed, sealing me inside this nightmare. I planted both hands against the polished oak and shoved with all my remaining strength.
The massive doors swung outward, groaning loudly on their iron hinges.
Blinding sunlight slammed into my vision. I squinted, stepping out onto the stone portico. The sharp rays offered no warmth, only a harsh, unforgiving spotlight on my ruined day.
A sleek black sedan idled right at the bottom of the concrete steps.
The rear passenger door swung open immediately.
I walked down the stairs, the expensive silk gathering dirt with every downward step. Reaching the vehicle, I placed my sap-stained, satin-covered hand on the edge of the metal roof.
I pulled my phone back out. Not to text Julian. I opened the firm's secure portal and watched my own login clear in half a second. Senior Legal Consultant. Universal administrative clearance. Every file Julian would walk into federal court to present on Tuesday lived behind a password he had never once bothered to learn.
He thought he had left a bride at the altar.
He had handed the architect of his entire career a loaded gun, and walked away to hold another woman's hand.
I slid into the leather seat and shut the door.
"The penthouse," I told the driver. "And then I am going to erase myself from every inch of his life before he even notices I am gone."
His 99th Excuse, My Empty Aisle of Contents
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