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Tenth Time Left at Altar Novel Cover

Tenth Time Left at Altar

The chapel was adorned with white roses and crystal chandeliers, sunlight streaming through stained glass windows casting rainbow patterns across my designer gown. I stood before three hundred guests, my heart racing with anticipation as the string quartet played our carefully selected piece. This was it—our tenth attempt at marriage, and surely, nothing could go wrong this time. I smoothed the silk of my Vera Wang gown, the fabric cool against my trembling fingers. The weight of my grandmother's diamond necklace felt reassuring against my collarbone. Ten times we had planned this day. Ten times I had believed in forever. "You look beautiful," my mother whispered beside me, squeezing my hand. "This time will be different." I nodded, forcing a smile. "It has to be." Denver stood tall at the altar, his dark suit impeccable, his eyes meeting mine with what I thought was unwavering devotion.
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Chapter 2

I drifted in and out of consciousness, the hospital ceiling tiles blurring above me. White. Everything was white—the sheets, the walls, the uniforms of nurses who moved like ghosts around my bed. My body felt impossibly heavy, as though the weight of ten failed weddings pressed down on my chest.

"Miss Griffin?" A nurse with kind eyes and auburn hair checked my IV. "Can you hear me?"

I nodded slightly, not trusting my voice.

"You've been in for three days now," she said gently. "Your mother's been calling. Would you like me to tell her you're awake?"

Before I could answer, hushed voices from the hallway caught my attention.

"Did you hear about that society wedding?" A younger nurse whispered to her colleague just outside my door. "The Carter-Silva wedding at City Hall?"

"God, yes. Three days after he left that poor Griffin girl at the altar for the tenth time."

My heart stuttered. Three days?

"I heard he invited her to be the maid of honor," the second nurse snickered. "As if!"

Their laughter faded as they moved down the hall, but their words remained, slicing through the fog in my mind.

Three days. Denver had married Samara just three days after abandoning me in that chapel.

The door to my room opened, and a hospital orderly entered with a small stack of mail.

"Special delivery for you, Miss Griffin," he said, placing the envelopes on my bedside table.

My hand trembled as I reached for the top envelope. The paper was thick, expensive—wedding invitation quality. My name was written in elegant calligraphy across the front.

Inside was a cream-colored card with gold embossing:

*Mr. and Mrs. Carter request the honor of your presence as maid of honor at the marriage of their son, Denver Carter, to Samara Silva.*

The date was three days ago.

A note in Denver's handwriting was paperclipped to the corner: "Alexandra, I know this is difficult, but Samara needs my support. I hope you'll be there for her. She's always admired you."

Something broke inside me then—something fundamental that had been holding together through all the disappointments, all the abandonment. With shaking hands, I tore the invitation into tiny pieces, watching as the confetti of my shattered dignity fluttered to the floor.

"Get out," I whispered to the orderly who stood watching me. "Please, just leave."

---

The west wing of the hospital was quiet, filled with the soft beeping of machines and the hushed voices of nurses who spoke in reverent tones. This was where the comatose patients rested—those suspended between worlds, neither here nor there.

I found solace in this silence. Here, no one expected me to smile or pretend I was healing. Here, I could just exist in my brokenness.

"Miss Griffin?" A night nurse smiled gently as I settled into the armchair beside bed seven. "Back again?"

I nodded, clutching my worn copy of "Pride and Prejudice." The patient in bed seven had been here for months—a handsome man with dark hair and strong features, despite his unconscious state. No one ever visited him except occasional medical staff.

"I brought Mr. Peterson some Jane Austen today," I said softly, opening the book to where I'd left off yesterday.

The nurse nodded sympathetically and slipped away, leaving me alone with Fletcher Peterson.

"'It is a truth universally acknowledged,'" I began reading, my voice barely above a whisper, "'that a single man in possession of a good fortune must be in want of a wife.'"

I read for hours sometimes, losing myself in Austen's world of manners and restraint, so different from my own chaotic reality.

"Elizabeth Bennett reminds me of you," I told Fletcher's still form on the seventh day of my visits. "Stubborn and proud, even when everyone expects her to break."

I didn't expect an answer. I never did.

But that day, as I read the final chapter, something changed.

"Miss Griffin," the night nurse called from the doorway, her voice unusually tense. "Could you come here for a moment?"

I set the book down reluctantly and followed her into the hallway.

"Mr. Peterson's vitals are fluctuating," she explained. "The doctor thinks he might be coming out of his coma. We need to prepare the room."

Before I could respond, a weak voice called from inside the room.

"Alexandra?"

I froze, my heart pounding against my ribs.

"Alexandra," the voice repeated, stronger this time. "Is that you?"

Slowly, I pushed open the door.

Fletcher Peterson's eyes were open—deep blue and focused directly on me.

"I've been waiting for you," he said, his voice rough from disuse. "I've been dreaming of you for years."

He reached for my hand with surprising strength, pulling me closer.

"I've loved you since college," he confessed, his eyes never leaving mine. "I've drawn you a thousand times."

With his free hand, he gestured toward the drawer of his bedside table. Inside lay a leather-bound sketchbook.

I opened it with trembling fingers to find page after page of portraits—my profile as I walked across campus, my hands as I adjusted my hair, my smile captured in a moment I couldn't even remember.

"Fletcher," I whispered, my voice catching. "How did you—"

"I've always seen you," he said simply. "Even when no one else did."

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