
My Groom Left Me for My Roommate at the Altar
Chapter 1
The Plaza's grand ballroom shimmered like a dream—crystal chandeliers casting golden light across Manhattan's elite, champagne towers reaching toward the ceiling, and my mother Elena's face radiant with the satisfaction of a perfect social triumph. I smoothed down the silk of my engagement dress—a Valentino she'd selected with the precision of a military strategist—and caught Cole's eye across the room. He was supposed to be making his way to me for our official toast, the one my mother had rehearsed with him three times. Instead, he was at the microphone, and something in his expression made my champagne flute freeze halfway to my lips.
"I have an announcement," Cole's voice carried across the suddenly hushed ballroom. The string quartet trailed off into silence. "I know this isn't how anyone expected this evening to go, but I can't pretend anymore. I'm in love with someone else."
The room tilted. I heard the clink of glasses, the sharp intake of breath from my mother, the collective gasp of New York society witnessing the unthinkable. My eyes found Daphne—my roommate, my confidante—standing perfectly positioned near the microphone in a dress I recognized from my own closet. She looked radiant, expectant, her hand already extended toward Cole as he beckoned her forward.
"Daphne Russell," he continued, taking her hand, "has shown me what real love feels like. I can't go through with this engagement knowing my heart belongs somewhere else."
I felt the weight of every gaze in the room. The pity, the shock, the barely concealed delight in witnessing such a spectacular fall from grace. My mother's face had gone white, her social masterpiece crumbling before her eyes. My father stood rigid, his Boston-bred sense of propriety visibly shattered. But it was Daphne's expression that cut deepest—not triumph, but something worse: the serene certainty of a woman who had played a long game and won.
I set down my champagne glass with a steady hand that surprised even me. The crystal touched the marble tabletop with a soft clink that seemed to echo in the silence. I smiled—the smile I'd practiced for years, the one that never revealed what was underneath. My fingers moved to my clutch, extracting my lipstick with deliberate calm. I traced the color across my lips, sealing my composure back into place, and walked toward the gilded doors.
Heels clicking against marble, I felt the weight of the room's collective breath as I passed. My mother called my name, her voice sharp with panic. I didn't turn. I stepped through the doors and into the night, leaving behind the wreckage of the life I'd thought was mine.
In my penthouse, alone in the dress that now felt like a costume from someone else's story, I poured myself a glass of the Macallan my father had given me for my engagement. My phone buzzed incessantly—pity texts from friends, alerts from gossip columns already crafting their headlines. I silenced it and drank deeply, feeling the burn track down my throat.
"Comfort Bride Wanted," a pop-up ad blinked on my screen. I stared at it, bleary-eyed and bitter. "Generous Compensation. Discretion Guaranteed."
A laugh escaped me—sharp and humorless. What was I now if not in need of comfort? What did I have to lose? I clicked, uploaded my photo with mocking defiance, and signed the digital NDA with the flourish of someone who had nothing left to protect. Let them have their scandal. I would write my own ending.
I didn't know then that the ad had been engineered to appear on my devices alone, timed to this exact moment of my humiliation. I didn't know that a black car was already waiting to change everything.
Twelve hours later, the car pulled up to my building. A man in an impeccable suit emerged, carrying a leather portfolio. "Ms. Castillo? I represent the Marshall family. We received your application."
I invited him in, still wearing yesterday's dress, and listened as he outlined the terms: one hundred million dollars, unlimited black cards, no public obligations beyond the duration of the marriage. I read every line with the focus I'd once reserved for my Columbia coursework, asking three sharp questions and receiving three satisfactory answers.
"This is quite the business arrangement," I said, pen hovering over the signature line.
"Indeed," he replied, his expression revealing nothing. "Mr. Marshall is... eager to proceed."
I signed my name with a flourish, telling myself it was the cleverest decision I'd ever made. I didn't yet understand that cleverness had nothing to do with it.
At City Hall, I expected to find a pale, hollow-cheeked invalid—a dying man seeking comfort in his final days. Instead, I found myself facing a man who stole the breath from my lungs. Tall, devastatingly handsome, with dark eyes that held an intensity that made my skin prickle. His charcoal coat hung perfectly on his frame, suggesting fragility it didn't quite confirm. He looked at me with an expression I couldn't name—something between recognition and hunger.
"Trey Marshall," he said, extending his hand. His grip was warm, steady, alive.
"Ava Castillo," I replied, studying him. "I was told you were... unwell."
A smile touched his lips. "Reports of my death have been greatly exaggerated."
We signed the marriage certificate. I became Mrs. Marshall. And as we stepped out into the sunlight, he leaned close and whispered, "I've been looking forward to this."
I assumed it was a polite formality. I couldn't have known then that every word was true.
The Marshall penthouse on the Upper East Side took my breath away—a sprawling testament to old money and impeccable taste. I conducted an immediate inventory: the gleaming piano in the east sitting room, prescription bottles arranged neatly on a bathroom shelf (two were unopened, I noted), and not a single photograph of any previous girlfriend. Within hours, my favorite coffee appeared—a rare Ethiopian blend I'd mentioned once in passing. I filed the detail away, saying nothing, but wondering how he could possibly have known.
I didn't yet understand that nothing in this new life would be left to chance. And I certainly didn't know that the man I'd married was about to become the most dangerous addiction I'd ever face.
You may also like





