
My Fiancé Left Me at Wedding for His Sister-in-Law
Chapter 4
The pregnancy test felt like it weighed a thousand pounds in my trembling hand as I approached the breakfast table the next morning. Lucas sat hunched over his laptop, dark circles under his eyes from another restless night. The scent of coffee filled the air, but my stomach churned at the smell—morning sickness had been my constant companion for weeks now.
I slipped the test back into my robe pocket, my fingers lingering on the smooth plastic. The two pink lines had been burned into my memory since the moment they'd appeared, but I needed the perfect moment to share this news. After last night's devastating fight, after watching him light up when Mike called him "Daddy," I knew this pregnancy could be my salvation—our salvation.
"Lucas," I said softly, settling into the chair across from him. "We need to talk."
He looked up from his screen, his expression guarded. The warmth that used to fill his eyes when he saw me had been replaced by something distant, distracted. "If this is about last night—"
"It's not." I forced my voice to remain steady, even as my heart hammered against my ribs. "It's about us. Our future. Our wedding."
His fingers stilled on the keyboard. "Tara, we've talked about this. With everything that's happened—"
"I know." I leaned forward, my hands clasped tightly in my lap. "But Lucas, we can't keep postponing our lives indefinitely. We've been engaged for three years. We love each other. We were supposed to be married by now, starting our family, building our future together."
Something flickered across his features—guilt, perhaps, or the ghost of the man who used to dream about our wedding day with the same fervor I did.
"I need this, Lucas," I continued, my voice barely above a whisper. "I need to know that we're still a priority. That what we have still matters. Can we please just go to the church today? Set a new date? Make this official?"
The silence stretched between us like a taut wire. From the guest room came the sound of Sophia's gentle voice reading to Mike, the domestic scene that had become the soundtrack of our mornings. Lucas's gaze drifted toward the sound, and I held my breath, waiting.
Finally, he closed his laptop with a soft click. "Okay," he said quietly. "You're right. We can go this afternoon. Set a date."
Relief flooded through me so powerfully that I almost gasped. "Really?"
"Really." He reached across the table and squeezed my hand—the first tender gesture he'd offered me in weeks. "I'm sorry, Tara. I know this has been hard on you too. On us."
Tears pricked at my eyes as I squeezed his hand back. "Thank you. This means everything to me."
As we drove toward the church that afternoon, sunlight streaming through the windshield, I felt lighter than I had in months. Lucas hummed along to the radio—something he hadn't done since before the funeral—and I caught glimpses of the man I'd fallen in love with. The man who used to plan surprise picnics and leave sweet notes in my lunch bag. The man who used to talk about our future with such certainty and joy.
"I was thinking maybe a small ceremony this time," I said, watching the familiar streets roll by. "Just close family and friends. Something intimate and meaningful."
"That sounds perfect." His smile was genuine, reaching his eyes for the first time in weeks. "Maybe we could do it in your parents' garden? You always said you wanted to get married there."
My heart swelled with hope. This was it—the moment I'd been waiting for. Once we set the date, once we were sitting in the church planning our future, I would tell him about the baby. I could picture his face when I shared the news, the way his eyes would light up with wonder and joy. Our child would be the bridge back to each other, the reminder of what we were building together.
"I love you," I said suddenly, the words spilling out before I could stop them.
He glanced at me, his expression soft. "I love you too, Tara. I know I haven't been... I know things have been complicated. But I do love you."
The church parking lot was nearly empty when we pulled in, just a few cars belonging to the administrative staff. The Gothic spires reached toward the cloudy sky, and I remembered standing here three months ago, full of excitement and anticipation for what should have been the happiest day of my life.
This time would be different. This time, nothing would go wrong.
Lucas had just put the car in park when his phone rang.
The sound cut through our peaceful moment like a blade. I watched his face change as he glanced at the screen, saw the way his expression shifted from relaxed contentment to immediate concern.
"Sophia?" he answered, his voice already tense with worry.
Even from the passenger seat, I could hear her voice through the phone—breathy, panicked, desperate. "Lucas, thank God. I need you to come back. Right now."
"What's wrong? Is Mike okay?"
"He woke up from his nap crying for you. He keeps asking where his daddy went, and I can't calm him down. He's having some kind of anxiety attack—he can barely breathe. I don't know what to do."
I watched Lucas's face transform, saw the exact moment our afternoon plans crumbled to dust. His jaw tightened with determination, his protective instincts overriding everything else—including me, including us, including the future we'd just been planning.
"I'm coming," he said without hesitation. "Tell him Daddy's coming home."
Daddy. The word hit me like a physical blow.
He was already turning the key in the ignition, already pulling out of the parking space. "I'm sorry, Tara. We'll have to reschedule."
"Lucas, wait—" But my words were lost in the sound of the engine as he accelerated away from the church, away from our appointment, away from any hope I had left.
I sat frozen in the passenger seat, watching the church grow smaller in the side mirror. My hand moved instinctively to my stomach, to the secret I'd been so eager to share, the miracle I'd thought would save us.
But as Lucas drove back toward the apartment—toward Sophia and Mike, toward the family that wasn't ours but had somehow become his priority—I realized with devastating clarity that even a baby might not be enough to bring him back to me.
The pregnancy test in my purse felt heavier than ever, its promise of new life overshadowed by the death of everything I'd believed about the man I loved.
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