
Rejecting His Obsession
Chapter 1
The cathedral's stained glass windows cast rainbow patterns across my white satin gown as I stood alone at the altar, my bouquet of white roses trembling in my hands. This was supposed to be the happiest day of my life—my fairytale ending with Ethan Sterling, the man who had pursued me relentlessly since our days at Columbia, promising me the world and everything in it.
But something was wrong. Terribly wrong.
The string quartet had played the wedding march twice now. The minister shifted uncomfortably beside me, checking his watch with increasing frequency. I scanned the sea of faces before me—hundreds of New York's elite in designer suits and couture dresses, diamond earrings catching the light as heads turned to whisper behind manicured hands.
In the front row, William Sterling sat rigid in his tailored tuxedo, his expression a mask of controlled fury as he checked his phone for what must have been the twentieth time. Beside him, the rest of the Sterling family maintained their perfect postures, though I could see the tension in their tightly drawn smiles.
My gaze drifted to the opposite side, where my parents looked so out of place among the opulence. Mom in her department store dress that we'd spent weeks choosing, Dad tugging at his rented tuxedo collar. The worry in their eyes made my stomach clench.
"He's just running late," I whispered to no one in particular, the words feeling hollow even as they left my lips. "Traffic in Manhattan, probably."
The cathedral's massive doors remained closed. No groom. No best man. No groomsmen.
Minutes stretched into an eternity. The murmurs grew louder, rippling through the congregation like waves. I felt every eye on me, pitying, curious, judgmental. My cheeks burned hot with humiliation as I stood there, on display in my twenty-thousand-dollar gown that Ethan had insisted on, because "nothing but the best for my future Mrs. Sterling."
Then I saw him—Leo Vance, Ethan's best man and lifelong friend, slipping in through a side door. His face was ashen as he made his way toward me, his steps hesitant. My heart began to pound so hard I could feel it in my throat.
"Madison," he said quietly when he reached me, his voice barely audible over the orchestra. "I need to speak with you."
"Where is he?" I demanded, my voice higher than normal. "Where's Ethan?"
Leo glanced around at the hundreds of witnesses, then leaned closer. "He's not coming," he said, the words like a physical blow. "He's... he's at Mount Sinai Hospital. With Rachel."
"Rachel?" I repeated numbly. "His assistant?"
Leo's eyes couldn't meet mine. "She's pregnant. There were complications. He... he took her to the emergency room."
The bouquet slipped from my fingers, hitting the marble floor with a soft thud that seemed to echo through the now-silent cathedral. The world tilted sideways as the truth crashed over me in waves. Rachel. His assistant. Pregnant. With Ethan's child.
Behind me, the minister cleared his throat. "Perhaps we should—"
"No," I cut him off, my voice sounding distant to my own ears. "There won't be a wedding today."
The words unleashed chaos. Gasps and exclamations erupted throughout the cathedral. William Sterling was on his feet, barking orders into his phone. My mother rushed toward me, her face crumpled in distress.
But I barely registered any of it. My hand moved automatically to my purse, retrieving my phone with trembling fingers. As if in a trance, I unlocked it, and the app I'd been too afraid to show Ethan glowed on the screen—my pregnancy tracking app, confirming what I'd suspected for weeks.
Six weeks pregnant. With Ethan's child.
The cathedral spun around me, faces blurring into a kaleidoscope of colors. My knees buckled as the full weight of the betrayal crashed down upon me. Not only had Ethan abandoned me at the altar for another woman—he'd abandoned me while I carried his child.
As darkness closed in around the edges of my vision, I was vaguely aware of falling, of concerned voices calling my name, of hands reaching out to catch me. But all I could think was that the fairytale I'd believed in had never existed at all.
I collapsed into tears before the stunned congregation, my white gown pooling around me like the shattered pieces of the life I thought I was going to have.
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