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My Fiancé Left Me at Wedding for His Sister-in-Law Novel Cover

My Fiancé Left Me at Wedding for His Sister-in-Law

Tara Angwin’s wedding day was supposed to be the start of her happily ever after. Instead, just as she was about to say “I do,” tragedy struck—Lucas, her fiancé, abandoned her at the altar to rush to the side of his brother’s grieving widow, Sophia. In the days that follow, Tara’s world begins to unravel. Sophia and her young son move into Tara’s home under the guise of grief, but soon, Sophia’s presence is everywhere—her things in the living room, her voice in the kitchen, her influence creeping into every corner of Tara’s life. Lucas, blinded by guilt and a need to protect his nephew, defends Sophia at every turn, leaving Tara feeling like an outsider in her own relationship. Desperate and on the verge of losing everything, Tara discovers a secret that could change everything: she’s pregnant with Lucas’s child. Now, she must fight not only for her relationship, but for her future, as the line between family and betrayal blurs and dark truths threaten to shatter them all.
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Chapter 1

"Do you, Lucas Field, take Tara Angwin to be your lawfully wedded wife—"

The church bells had been ringing moments before, their joyful chimes echoing through the vaulted ceiling as I stood at the altar in my ivory silk gown.

Lucas's hands were warm in mine, his eyes locked on my face as the officiant began the sacred words we'd waited three years to hear.

I was already tearful, locking eyes with him, almost shaking for this long-wanted moment.

But the officiant didn’t have the chance to finish the question.

-

The heavy wooden doors of St. Mary's Cathedral burst open with a thunderous crash that silenced the officiant mid-sentence.

The sound reverberated through the church like a gunshot, and every head turned toward the entrance.

Sophia Field, Lucas’ sister-in-law stumbled into the aisle, her black hair disheveled, mascara streaming down her cheeks in dark rivulets. She clutched four-year-old Mike against her hip, the little boy's face buried in her shoulder as she wailed—a sound so raw and desperate it made my skin crawl.

"He's gone!" she screamed, her voice echoing off the stone walls. "David's gone! He didn’t make it and the hospital just called me—"

The words hit the congregation like a physical blow. Gasps rippled through the pews. My mother's hand flew to her mouth.

Nobody wanted such bad news on their wedding day, neither did I. David had been sick for months, but no one expected him to pass away, let alone on his brother’s wedding day.

I took a gasp and turned to Lucas, ready to ask if we should cease our wedding and maybe go to talk to our family or go to hospital together.

But Lucas's reaction shattered me.

His hands dropped mine as if I'd burned him. The warmth in his eyes—the love I'd seen there just seconds before—vanished, replaced by something I couldn't name.

Without a single glance in my direction, without a word of explanation or even an apology, he stepped away from me.

Not once did he turn back to give me a word.

"Sophia," he breathed, firstly moving then running, his polished dress shoes clicking against the marble as he rushed down the aisle toward his brother's widow.

I stood frozen at the altar, my bouquet of white roses trembling in my hands as I watched the man I loved—the man who was supposed to become my husband in the next sixty seconds—wrap his arms around another woman.

Sophia collapsed against him, her sobs growing louder, more theatrical. "The car—it flipped—David didn't make it to the hospital—"

"Shh," Lucas murmured, his voice gentle in a way that made my chest tighten. "I'm here. I've got you."

Little Mike lifted his head from his mother's shoulder, his wide brown eyes finding Lucas's face. "Uncle Lucas?" he whispered, and something in Lucas's expression softened even further.

"David still waits for me at the hospital," Sophia gasped, clinging to Lucas's lapels. "I just want you to be there with me. I can't—I can't do this alone—"

"You won't have to," Lucas said firmly. He glanced back at the congregation, his gaze skipping over me entirely as if I were invisible. "We need to go. Now."

And then they were leaving. Lucas, Sophia, and Mike, moving toward the exit in a tight cluster of grief and urgency. The heavy doors swung shut behind them with a final, damning thud.

The silence that followed was deafening.

I stood there in my wedding dress, still holding my bouquet, as three hundred guests stared at me with expressions ranging from pity to confusion to barely concealed shock. The officiant cleared his throat awkwardly.

"I... I suppose we should... postpone the ceremony," he announced, his voice echoing in the sudden quiet.

Postpone. As if this were a minor scheduling conflict. As if my fiancé hadn't just abandoned me at the altar without so much as a backward glance.

My legs felt weak. The cathedral seemed to tilt around me, the stained glass windows blurring into kaleidoscopes of color. I gripped the altar rail to steady myself, my knuckles white against the dark wood.

"Tara, honey—" My mother's voice cut through the haze as she hurried up the aisle, her heels clicking urgently against the stone. Her face was pale, her eyes wide with concern and something that looked like embarrassment.

"I'm fine," I managed, though the words felt like glass in my throat. "I'm perfectly fine."

But I wasn't fine. I was standing in a church full of people who had come to witness my happily ever after, wearing a dress I'd spent months choosing, holding flowers that were supposed to be tossed to eager single women in a few hours. Instead, I was the abandoned bride—a cautionary tale, a source of gossip that would fuel dinner conversations for months.

"What do we do about the reception?" my cousin Jennifer whispered loudly enough for half the church to hear. "The caterers are already setting up—"

"We'll figure it out," my mother said sharply, shooting Jennifer a look that could have cut glass. She reached for my arm. "Come on, sweetheart. Let's get you out of here."

I let her guide me down the aisle, my train whispering against the marble with each step. The guests parted like the Red Sea, their whispered conversations following me out of the sanctuary.

"Poor thing..."

"Can you believe he just left her there?"

"Well, his brother did just die..."

"Still, on their wedding day..."

The church vestibule felt like a fishbowl. Everywhere I looked, there were faces—concerned relatives, shocked friends, curious strangers who'd come for the spectacle and gotten more than they'd bargained for. My phone was already buzzing in my mother's purse, the sound like an angry wasp.

"Tara!" Olivia's voice cut through the crowd as she pushed her way toward me, her emerald bridesmaid dress wrinkled from her rush to reach me. Her dark eyes blazed with fury. "What the hell just happened? Where did Lucas go?"

"His brother died," I said quietly, the words feeling surreal on my tongue. "Just… Died. Happened to be on our wedding day, though."

"So he just... left you? Here? Like this?" Olivia's voice rose with each word, drawing more stares. "On your wedding day?"

I wanted to defend him. The words were right there, ready to tumble out—he was in shock, he was grieving, he had to help Sophia and Mike. But they stuck in my throat like thorns.

Because deep down, in a place I didn't want to examine too closely, I knew that if our positions had been reversed—if it had been my sibling who'd died—Lucas would have expected me to stay. To support him. To put our relationship first.

But he hadn't given me the same consideration.

"I need to go home," I whispered, suddenly desperate to escape the pitying stares and whispered conversations. "I need to get out of this dress."

As my mother led me toward the exit, my phone continued its relentless buzzing. Messages from friends, relatives, coworkers—all wanting to know what had happened, if I was okay, if the wedding was really canceled.

I wasn't okay. Nothing was okay.

And somewhere across town, Lucas was comforting his brother's widow while I stood alone in the ruins of what was supposed to be the happiest day of my life.

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