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Vegas Wedding Betrayal Novel Cover

Vegas Wedding Betrayal

The marble steps of the courthouse felt cold beneath my heels, even through the ivory satin of my carefully chosen wedding shoes. I smoothed down the silk of my dress—the one I'd saved for three years to buy, the one that made me feel like the bride I'd dreamed of being for ten long years. The marriage documents crinkled slightly in my trembling hands as I checked my phone for the hundredth time. 11:47 AM. Donald was nearly two hours late. I told myself there had to be a reasonable explanation. Traffic. A last-minute business emergency. Maybe his phone had died. Donald Spencer, CEO of Spencer Industries, was always dealing with some crisis or another.
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Chapter 1

The marble steps of the courthouse felt cold beneath my heels, even through the ivory satin of my carefully chosen wedding shoes. I smoothed down the silk of my dress—the one I'd saved for three years to buy, the one that made me feel like the bride I'd dreamed of being for ten long years. The marriage documents crinkled slightly in my trembling hands as I checked my phone for the hundredth time.

11:47 AM. Donald was nearly two hours late.

I told myself there had to be a reasonable explanation. Traffic. A last-minute business emergency. Maybe his phone had died. Donald Spencer, CEO of Spencer Industries, was always dealing with some crisis or another. I'd spent a decade understanding that, accommodating it, making myself smaller so his world could expand.

The autumn wind picked up, sending fallen leaves skittering across the courthouse plaza. I pulled my light jacket tighter around my shoulders, grateful I'd thought to bring it despite the morning's warmth. Other couples had come and gone—happy pairs with nervous laughter and shining eyes, emerging minutes later with gold bands catching the sunlight and joy radiating from their faces.

I envied them their certainty.

My phone buzzed. Finally. But instead of Donald's name on the screen, I saw a cascade of social media notifications. Instagram. Facebook. Twitter. All mentioning me in posts I hadn't made.

My heart hammered against my ribs as I opened Instagram with shaking fingers. Charlie Wright's perfectly manicured profile filled my screen, and the world tilted sideways.

There she was—Donald's assistant, the woman who couldn't design a decent logo to save her life, the one whose mistakes I'd been quietly fixing for months—wearing a flowing white dress. Not just any white dress. A wedding dress. And beside her, in a black tuxedo I'd helped him pick out last month, stood Donald.

My Donald.

The caption made my stomach lurch: "Finally Mrs. Spencer! Sometimes love finds a way! 💕👰🤵💍 #VegasWedding #MrAndMrsSpencer #LoveWins"

The photos scrolled past in a blur of white tulle and champagne glasses. Donald's hands on Charlie's waist. His lips pressed against hers in front of a gaudy chapel backdrop. Her left hand prominently displayed, showing off a diamond ring I'd never seen before.

The marriage documents slipped from my numb fingers, scattering across the courthouse steps like broken promises.

I couldn't breathe. The world spun around me, the courthouse facade blurring through tears I didn't remember starting to shed. Ten years. Ten years of supporting his dreams, working late nights to perfect his presentations, giving up my own career opportunities so he could chase his ambitions. Ten years of "soon, Ashley" and "when the company stabilizes" and "you know how much you mean to me."

And he'd married her. In Vegas. While I waited for him like a fool on courthouse steps.

My phone rang, Donald's name flashing across the screen like a cruel joke. For a moment, I stared at it, part of me wanting to let it ring forever, to preserve this last moment before whatever explanation would make everything worse.

But I answered.

"Ashley, baby, I can explain—"

"Explain?" My voice came out as a whisper, then stronger. "Explain what, Donald? Explain why I'm sitting alone on courthouse steps while your new wife posts pictures of your wedding?"

"It's not what it looks like." His voice carried that smooth, practiced tone he used in board meetings. "Charlie needed help with her family situation. You know how traditional her parents are—they've been pressuring her about marriage for months. This is just business, Ash. Just helping a friend."

Just business. The words hit me like physical blows.

"Business?" I laughed, but it sounded broken even to my own ears. "You married someone else as a business transaction?"

"Come on, you're overreacting. Nothing has to change between us. Charlie understands the situation. We can still—"

"Still what?" I stood up, my legs unsteady but my voice growing stronger. "Still pretend you didn't just marry another woman? Still act like the last ten years meant something?"

"Ashley, you're being dramatic. This doesn't change how I feel about you. Charlie and I, we're just friends. This marriage thing is temporary, just until her family backs off. You know you're the one I—"

"Stop." The word came out sharp, cutting through his excuses. "Just stop talking."

I could hear him breathing on the other end, probably calculating his next move, his next manipulation. But for the first time in ten years, I wasn't interested in making it easier for him.

"Ashley, baby, please. Don't do anything rash. We can work this out. We always do."

But as I looked down at the scattered marriage documents—our marriage documents, the ones that would never be signed—I realized something had shifted inside me. Something fundamental and irreversible.

The woman who had waited on these steps was gone.

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