Follow
Chapters
Share
On My Wedding Day Novel Cover

On My Wedding Day

On her thirtieth birthday, the deadline for a long-awaited promise, the protagonist is abandoned by Henry Jones. He chooses to escort his pregnant sister-in-law to an appointment instead, dismissing fifteen years of devotion as secondary to his late brother's legacy. After realizing she has lost her dignity in this relationship, she walks away for good. As Henry discovers the truth about the baby's paternity and his own misplaced loyalty, he is forced to face a devastating reality. By the time he realizes his mistake, the only woman who ever truly supported him has vanished, leaving him to beg for a forgiveness he may never receive.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 3

Late at night, Henry burst in with cold air clinging to him.

When he saw me sitting on the living room couch, he visibly relaxed.

After changing his shoes, he came over with a paper bag in his hand, his tone light—almost like he wanted praise.

“Here. Haven’t you been talking about this place’s donuts for days? I drove all the way out there. They’re still warm.”

That shop was in the old district. From our apartment, it was at least forty kilometers round trip.

As he spoke, he reached out like he’d done a thousand times—trying to pull me into his arms.

I stood up and bent over to set the donuts on the coffee table, slipping neatly out of his reach, avoiding his arm and that familiar intimacy.

My throat tightened. I forced a small smile.

“Just leave them there. I don’t really have an appetite right now.”

Henry’s arm froze midair. Then he casually withdrew it, acting as if nothing happened.

He glanced me over, expression unchanged—assuming I was just sulking—and turned toward the bathroom.

“Fine. Eat when you’re hungry. I’m having a shower.”

Water started running.

That was when the phone he’d tossed onto the couch lit up.

Like I’d been possessed, I picked it up.

No passcode.

I’d always known that—but I’d never once thought about checking.

The screen unlocked and jumped straight into his chat with Ann.

A photo filled the entire screen.

A gorgeous, elaborate cream cake.

And the logo on the cake box… was from the same shop as the donuts he’d just brought me.

Under the photo was a message:

“The cake is so— good! Thanks for recommending, Henry~ Getting to eat something this delicious before my checkup makes my belly hurt less”

So that was it.

The “special treatment” I thought required a forty-kilometer drive—was just scraps.

He’d carefully picked a cake for someone else then tossed me the leftovers on the way home.

My heart felt like it had been soaked in iced lemon water—sour, bitter, tightening with pain.

Henry came out of the shower, hair still dripping. A towel was wrapped low around his waist.

He walked over with warm, damp air clinging to him—trying to hug me again.

I shoved him away like I’d been shocked, panicking for the stupidest excuse I could find.

“Don’t… I’m on my period. I don’t feel good.”

The warmth on Henry’s face vanished instantly.

In its place came sheer impatience and coldness.

He raked a rough hand through his wet hair, rolled his eyes, and spoke with suppressed irritation:

“Rory Brown.”

He used my full name, his voice hard and icy.

“Do you really have to be like this? Always pressing. Always refusing to let things go?”

His volume rose, like my “unreasonableness” was the real problem.

“I don’t understand why you insist on setting the wedding on the day of Ann’s prenatal checkup. One day earlier or later—what’s the difference? Did I ever say I wouldn’t marry you? Are you really this desperate? Throwing a fit over this?”

Every sentence was a dull knife stabbing into my heart.

He remembered everything.

He remembered his promise to my mother.

He remembered the agreement about my thirtieth birthday.

He just didn’t care.

Just like the way he didn’t care that Ann was my half-sister.

The way he didn’t care that she and her mother’s existence indirectly led to my mother’s death.

To him, I was simply irrational—taking out my anger on the wrong person.

The pain numbed me until I couldn’t even argue anymore.

I just lowered my head and stood there silently.

My silence only seemed to enrage him further.

He stared at me, his chest rising and falling hard, then let out a cold laugh.

“Fine. So you’ve really got guts now.”

He spun around, grabbed his coat and car keys from the couch, and slammed the door behind him.

Bang—

The sound echoed through the apartment, making my ears ring.

I stared at the door, still trembling slightly on its hinges, and at the hard line of his back as he left.

And suddenly I remembered the boy he used to be—bright, reckless, burning with life.

Back then, he wasn’t the family heir.

His father only gave him small projects, scraps to manage.

Henry poured all his money into investments, desperate to prove himself.

He hated that his father wanted to hand everything to Ethan.

He ran everywhere searching for capable partners.

At night, he would do data analysis for people just to cover our daily expenses.

On my birthday, he pulled three straight all-nighters and earned four hundred dollars—just to buy me a cake.

Henry back then… he truly loved me.

In his eyes, in his words—love was everywhere.

I’d seen the way he loved me.

So, the hesitation, the wavering he had now… I could see right through it.

Not long after he left, my phone vibrated.

A text from an unfamiliar number popped up.

But the tone—one glance, and I knew exactly who it was.

The photo showed a dim corner of a bar.

Henry tilted his head back, drinking, his side profile cold and sharp.

In the corner of the photo, you could faintly see a slender hand with nude-colored nail polish resting on his coat.

“Rory, Henry looks really unhappy. Looks like you made him mad again.”

“Don’t worry. I’ll comfort him properly. Want to guess if he’ll come back to you this time?”

“Everything you have—Dad, the house, and Henry—will be mine in the end.”

“You’ll never beat me.”

My fingers trembled so badly I could barely hold my phone.

It took everything I had to type my reply, one letter at a time:

“Is that so? Too bad. Trash I don’t want is only treasure to someone like you—picking it up and acting proud just makes you look pathetic.”