Follow
Chapters
Share
Love Amidst Heartbreak Novel Cover

Love Amidst Heartbreak

The cathedral bells should have been ringing for my wedding. Instead, they tolled like a funeral march as I stood there in my ivory silk gown, the delicate lace sleeves now wrinkled from clutching my bouquet too tightly. The Italian countryside stretched beyond the chapel's stone walls, postcard-perfect under the golden afternoon sun, but all I could see were the pitying stares of two hundred guests who had traveled across an ocean to witness what was supposed to be the happiest day of my life. "Mrs. Lynch?" The wedding coordinator approached with the careful steps of someone delivering terrible news. Her Italian accent made my name sound foreign, like it belonged to someone else entirely. "I'm afraid... there has been a development." My stomach dropped. Ryan had been missing for twenty minutes, and the whispers had already started rippling through the pews like wildfire. I could hear fragments—"cold feet," "second thoughts," "poor girl"—each word a tiny knife twisting deeper.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 1

The cathedral bells should have been ringing for my wedding. Instead, they tolled like a funeral march as I stood there in my ivory silk gown, the delicate lace sleeves now wrinkled from clutching my bouquet too tightly. The Italian countryside stretched beyond the chapel's stone walls, postcard-perfect under the golden afternoon sun, but all I could see were the pitying stares of two hundred guests who had traveled across an ocean to witness what was supposed to be the happiest day of my life.

"Mrs. Lynch?" The wedding coordinator approached with the careful steps of someone delivering terrible news. Her Italian accent made my name sound foreign, like it belonged to someone else entirely. "I'm afraid... there has been a development."

My stomach dropped. Ryan had been missing for twenty minutes, and the whispers had already started rippling through the pews like wildfire. I could hear fragments—"cold feet," "second thoughts," "poor girl"—each word a tiny knife twisting deeper.

"What kind of development?" My voice came out steadier than I felt, years of practicing emotional control finally serving a purpose.

She handed me a cream-colored envelope with my name scrawled across it in Ryan's familiar handwriting. My fingers trembled as I tore it open, and the words blurred together through my tears: *Laura, I can't do this. I'm sorry. I'm a coward, but maybe that's what you need to realize. —R*

The paper fluttered to the marble floor like a dying butterfly. Around me, the chapel erupted in concerned murmurs and shuffling feet. Someone's phone buzzed. A child started crying. The photographer lowered his camera with an uncomfortable grimace.

"Miss Lynch?" A deep voice cut through the chaos, and my heart stopped.

I turned slowly, afraid my mind was playing cruel tricks on me. But there he was—Matthew Morrison, Ryan's best man, standing at the altar in his perfectly tailored charcoal suit. Four years had transformed him from the earnest college boy I'd rejected into something else entirely. His shoulders had broadened, filling out his jacket in a way that made my breath catch. His jawline was sharper now, more defined, and when he spoke, his voice carried an authority that hadn't been there before.

"I think we need to get you out of here," he said quietly, his dark eyes meeting mine with an expression I couldn't read.

The same eyes that had looked at me with such hope during his confession. The same eyes that had filled with hurt when I'd chosen someone else. Now they were guarded, professional, like he was handling a business crisis rather than the emotional wreckage of someone he'd once loved.

"Matthew." His name felt strange on my tongue after years of silence. "I didn't know you were—"

"Ryan asked me to be his best man two months ago." His tone was carefully neutral. "I flew in from London yesterday."

London. Of course. He'd built an entire life on the other side of the world, probably with someone who appreciated what I'd been too stupid to see. The thought made my chest tighten with something that felt suspiciously like jealousy.

"The guests are starting to leave," he continued, glancing around the chapel with the same calm efficiency he'd always brought to crisis situations, even as children. "We should discuss arrangements for getting everyone home."

Arrangements. As if my humiliation was just another logistical problem to solve.

"I can handle it myself," I said, lifting my chin with what little dignity I had left.

Something flickered across his face—surprise, maybe, or disappointment. "Laura, you're in no condition to—"

"I'm fine." The lie tasted bitter. "I don't need your help."

But even as I said it, I knew it wasn't true. Ryan had booked everything—the flights, the hotels, the transportation. I had no idea how to get two hundred wedding guests back to the States, and my credit cards were already maxed out from paying for this disaster.

Matthew studied me for a long moment, and I had the uncomfortable feeling he could see right through my facade. He'd always been able to do that, even when we were kids.

"The last flight to New York leaves in four hours," he said finally. "I've already changed my ticket. There are two seats left in first class."

The implication hung between us like a challenge. Fly home together, or figure out how to navigate this mess alone.

I looked around the chapel one more time—at the wilting flowers, the abandoned programs scattered across the pews, the photographer packing up his equipment with obvious relief. This was supposed to be my fairy tale ending. Instead, it felt like the beginning of my worst nightmare.

"Fine," I whispered, gathering the train of my dress with shaking hands. "But this doesn't mean anything. It's just... practical."

Matthew's expression didn't change, but something in his eyes went cold. "Of course," he said. "Just practical."

As we walked down the aisle together—the aisle I was supposed to walk down as a bride—I couldn't help but notice how different everything felt with him beside me instead of Ryan. Matthew's presence was solid, reassuring in a way that Ryan's had never been. But it was also dangerous, because being near him again made me remember things I'd spent four years trying to forget.

The chapel doors closed behind us with a final, echoing thud.

You may also like

After My Husband Claimed a Fake Treasure, I Ended Us Novel Cover
9.0
The scrape of metal against dry earth was a sound so foreign in our backyard that I actually left the kitchen sink to investigate. Through the window, the late afternoon sun beat down in a suffocating glare, illuminating my husband, Lennon, elbow-deep in the hydrangeas. He was sweating through his designer polo—a shirt I had paid for—wielding a garden trowel with the clumsy irritation of a man who hadn't done a chore in five years. His mother, Margaret, had likely complained about the weeds again, and as usual, Lennon was performing just enough labor to claim exhaustion later. Then, the scraping stopped. Lennon dropped to his knees, his manicured fingers digging into the loose soil. When he stood, he was holding something small and caked in mud. He rubbed it vigorously against his thumb, holding it up to the harsh sunlight. Even from the window, I recognized it. It was a heavy resin bead, cloudy and slightly chipped, that I had bought for three dollars at a Brooklyn flea market years ago.
After My Husband Loved Another Woman Novel Cover
9.3
I arranged the tenth pancake carefully on Tyler's birthday stack, my fingers trembling slightly as I positioned the blue candles in the shape of a number ten. The morning light streamed through our kitchen windows, casting a warm glow across the marble countertop I'd once been so proud of. Now it just felt like another piece of the perfect life that was slowly crumbling around me. "Tyler! Breakfast is ready, birthday boy!" I called up the stairs, injecting as much cheer into my voice as I could muster. Michael's phone rang for the third time that morning. I watched his face light up as he checked the caller ID, that familiar spark in his eyes that had once been reserved for me—for us. "Rebecca," he murmured, as if her name alone was an excuse to step away from our family breakfast. "I need to take this." I bit my tongue as he slipped into the hallway, his voice dropping to that intimate tone he never used with me anymore. Tyler's footsteps thundered down the stairs, and I forced a smile onto my face, determined not to let my son see the fractures.
Bound to the calloway's heir Novel Cover
9.2
In LA's Business world, Zane Calloway, thirty, turns cartel king after his father's gruesome murder, ruling The Atlas Group with a bloody fist. He learned how betrayal could ruin even the biggest empire and was hell bent on keeping Atlas Group. However when Sienna Carter, his new assistant got in the picture, he threw caution to the wind. To become the only one controlling the cartel, he would use Sienna who was a supposedly ghost from a dead cartel as bait for his enemies. Sienna Carter made his mission become even more complicated as she ignites a dangerous sparks in him. Twenty-five year old Sienna Carter just wanted to stay alive, running away from danger had been the only thing she was capable of since her family were murdered. All she had as a semblance of her old life was the locket her dying father had given her and when a new job pops up in Los Angeles, she gambled for it, hoping for her sake that it wouldn't lead her straight to the same hell she was running from. However, she would soon realize that the Atlas Groups was going to be more than just a survival decision but the key to everything.
Early spring snow on the piano keys Novel Cover
8.7
Chapter 1 The diagnosis was clear: three months. That was all I had left. My phone rang. It was my wife. "Joseph," she said, "you need to come on the reality show *The Last Journey* with me." My instinct was to refuse, but she didn’t give me the chance. "I lost a bet to Stephen. The hundredth one." "You have to go. And on the final day, we leave the show together." For three years, Helen had made a hundred bets with me, every single one for the sake of her so-called "savior," Stephen. She’d lost ninety-nine times. The cruelest loss was the one that took our child—just seven months along. "Fine," I said. "I’ll go." Consider it my final journey with her. She just didn’t know it would be our last. *** *The Last Journey* was filming in a small northern town nestled at the foot of a mountain range. Light snow was falling when we arrived. Flakes settled on my shoulders, their biting chill sending a dull ache deep into my lungs. I coughed reflexively, covering my mouth with a handkerchief. When I pulled it away, a stark, vivid red stained the pure white cotton. Tucking the handkerchief back into my pocket as if nothing had happened, I looked up at Helen walking ahead. She wore a camel-colored coat, her posture straight and elegant—and just as distant and cold as the landscape around us. Not once did she glance back, as though I weren’t even there. The production crew rushed over, all smiles. "Helen! Joseph! Welcome, welcome! Your room’s all ready. You must be tired from the trip—please, rest first." Helen gave a slight, indifferent nod and walked straight toward the log cabin the crew had arranged. Pushing the door open, a wave of warm air greeted us. The room was spacious and cozy, dominated by a large bed covered with a soft wool blanket. According to the show’s rules, all married couples had to share a room during the trip. I started to wheel my suitcase inside, but Helen suddenly turned, her gaze icy. "You take the sofa." I froze. Her beautiful features were etched with pure disgust, as if sharing a bed with me would be unbearable. "I made a bet with Stephen," she said. "For this entire trip, you won’t lay a finger on me." Another bet.
Mafia Queen to First Lady: A Reborn Pact with the President Novel Cover
8.6
Leland, the world's most eligible bachelor and powerful President, was rumored to be in love-with Valerie, the nation's favorite punchline. Once rejected by his nephew and scorned for her looks, Valerie faced public outrage for "leeching" off Leland's status and entering government circles. Elite society mocked, rivals sneered. But the tables turned: the mafia king was spotted carrying her bags, scientists begged for her help, and Valerie saved the nation. As chaos erupted, Leland posted on the presidential account. "My wife wants to dump me-how do I win her back? Urgent advice needed!"
Reborn: The Lethal Ex-Wife's Bloody Return Novel Cover
7.4
I was the wife of Damien Valenti, the most ruthless mafia Don in Chicago. But to cement his power and marry a rival family's daughter, he exiled me to the slums without a single dime. "Stay not as my wife, Izzy, but as my whore." That was his final ultimatum before dumping me out of his black SUV like trash. Terrified of losing me, my five-year-old son, Angelo, secretly hid in the car to follow me. Two days later, in a squalid Indiana motel, Angelo caught severe pneumonia. I had no money and no doctor. In sheer desperation, I sliced my own wrist with broken glass, pressing my bleeding arm to his pale lips, begging him to drink and live. But my little boy died in my arms. Meanwhile, hundreds of miles away, Damien was sipping vintage champagne with his new bride, casually dismissing the life of his own flesh and blood. The grief turned me into a monster. I spent twenty years clawing my way through the underworld to destroy his empire, only to die with a bullet in my chest. I gave him my absolute devotion, yet he traded our family for political power without a single ounce of hesitation. Opening my eyes again, I was back in that hellish neon-lit motel room. Angelo was burning with fever and fighting for air, but he was still breathing. This time, I wasn't the naive girl who loved Damien Valenti. I was a woman holding two decades of their darkest secrets, and my vendetta had just begun.