
Marriage After Betrayal
Chapter 1
The civil affairs office buzzed with quiet anticipation, couples clutching identical folders of documents while stealing glances at each other with nervous smiles. I smoothed the fabric of my cream-colored dress for the hundredth time, the soft material chosen specifically for this moment—our moment. Seven years of waiting, of supporting Peter through his struggles, of believing in us, had led to this single morning.
My fingers traced the edge of the marriage registration forms tucked safely in my purse. Everything was perfect, organized down to the last detail. I'd even brought backup copies of our documents, just in case. The clock on the wall showed 9:15 AM. Peter was only fifteen minutes late, probably stuck in traffic or dealing with some last-minute work crisis.
"Next couple, please," called the clerk behind the counter.
I watched as another pair stepped forward, their hands intertwined, faces glowing with excitement. The woman wore a simple white blouse, nothing as carefully chosen as my dress, yet she radiated the kind of joy I'd been dreaming of for months. They presented their documents with eager efficiency, and within minutes, they were signing papers that would bind their lives together forever.
My phone remained stubbornly silent.
9:30 AM came and went. Then 9:45. The initial flutter of nerves in my stomach had transformed into something heavier, more acidic. I called Peter twice, but both calls went straight to voicemail. Around me, the steady stream of couples continued—some laughing, others serious, all moving forward with their lives while I sat frozen in my carefully chosen seat.
"Are you waiting for someone?" A kind-faced clerk approached, her voice gentle with practiced sympathy.
"Yes, my... my fiancé. He should be here any moment." The words felt hollow even as I spoke them.
She glanced at her watch. "We close for lunch in thirty minutes. If you'd like to reschedule—"
"No." The word came out sharper than I intended. "He'll be here."
But even as I said it, doubt crept through my chest like ice water. Peter had seemed distracted lately, always checking his phone, always ready to drop everything when Sienna called. His stepsister had a talent for creating emergencies that required his immediate attention, and I'd learned to bite my tongue about it over the years. Family was important to Peter—I understood that. I respected it, even when it meant our dinner plans got canceled or our weekend trips got postponed.
My phone finally buzzed at 10:03 AM.
"Joelle, thank God you answered." Peter's voice was breathless, strained. "I can't make it. Sienna's been in an accident—she called me crying, she's at the hospital and she's scared and alone. I had to come, you understand, right?"
The words hit me like a physical blow. Around me, the office continued its cheerful business, but suddenly everything felt muffled, distant. "Peter, it's our registration day. We planned this months ago."
"I know, I know, and I'm sorry, but this is an emergency. Sienna needs me right now. We can do the registration another time—maybe next week? The important thing is that we love each other, right? A piece of paper doesn't change that."
A piece of paper. Seven years of devotion, of standing by him through every crisis, every late night, every moment when he chose something else over us, and he was calling our marriage certificate a piece of paper.
"Peter, I'm already here. I'm dressed, I have all our documents—"
"Joelle, please don't make this harder than it has to be. Sienna is family. She's hurt and she needs me. You're strong, you can handle this. That's one of the things I love about you—you always understand."
The line went dead.
I stared at the phone screen, my reflection ghostlike in the black surface. Strong. Understanding. Always willing to wait, to accommodate, to put everyone else's needs before my own. When had those qualities become my prison?
"Miss?" The clerk had returned, her expression now tinged with pity. "I'm afraid we're closing for lunch soon..."
I stood on unsteady legs, my carefully planned morning crumbling around me like tissue paper in the rain. The other couples looked at me with curious glances as I gathered my purse, my unused documents, my shattered dreams.
Outside, the autumn air bit at my cheeks, or maybe those were tears I hadn't realized I was crying. Seven years. Seven years of being the understanding girlfriend, the supportive partner, the woman who never complained when she came second to Sienna's latest crisis.
I'd been such a fool.
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