
Wedding Day Betrayal: Pregnant and Alone
Chapter 2
I stood frozen in the small antechamber adjacent to the grand ballroom, my hands clutching my bouquet so tightly that the stems bent beneath my fingers. Through the partially open door, I could see the guests settling into their seats—three hundred of Manhattan's elite dressed in their finest, here to witness what was supposed to be the happiest day of my life.
"Two minutes, Ms. Jackson," the wedding coordinator whispered, her smile tight and professional. She'd been avoiding my eyes since Zyaire had made his announcement.
My parents sat in the front row, my mother's face a careful mask that couldn't quite hide her disapproval. Six months of cold war over my relationship with Zyaire, and now her eyes seemed to say, "I told you so." Behind them, Eleanor Warren, Zyaire's mother, sat with perfect posture, her diamond necklace catching the light from the chandeliers overhead. She hadn't bothered to hide her smirk when Zyaire told me his "better idea."
And there, in the back row, almost hidden in shadow, sat Foster Campbell. My childhood friend. The boy who'd pulled my pigtails in elementary school and taught me to ride a bike. The man who'd called me last week, voice hesitant, asking if I was sure about marrying Zyaire. I'd laughed off his concern then.
I wasn't laughing now.
The string quartet began playing Pachelbel's Canon, and my stomach twisted into knots. This wasn't how it was supposed to go. The videographer's absence was just the beginning—a test, perhaps, to see how much I would tolerate.
"It's traditional in the Warren family," Zyaire had explained earlier, his voice smooth as silk, "for a family friend to perform the blessing ceremony. Alani's perfect for it."
"But I thought I would—"
"And she'll need to wear the ceremonial dress. The one we had made. Your dress."
My dress. The one I'd spent hours selecting. The one that cost more than my first car.
"You want another woman to wear my wedding dress at our wedding?" I'd asked, my voice barely above a whisper.
"Don't be selfish, Ivy. You have the original dress. This is important to my family."
The music shifted, and there she was. Alani Wheeler, gliding down the aisle in what should have been my dress. The intricate beadwork caught the light, the train flowing behind her like liquid silver. The guests murmured, confusion rippling through the crowd. From the corner of my eye, I saw my mother stiffen, her hand reaching for my father's.
Alani reached the altar where Zyaire waited, his smile for her broader than any he'd given me today. The officiant began speaking, but his words faded to background noise as I watched Zyaire take Alani's hands in his, their fingers intertwining with practiced familiarity.
This was my wedding day. My Valentine's Day wedding that I'd dreamed about for years. And I was standing in the shadows, watching another woman take my place.
The whispers grew louder. I caught fragments—"...the bride?"... "...what's happening?"... "...some kind of family tradition?"
Humiliation burned through me, hot and fierce. I looked across the room and caught Foster's eye. He was watching me, not the spectacle at the altar, his face a mixture of concern and something else—something that looked remarkably like love.
In that moment, clarity struck me with the force of a lightning bolt. This wasn't about tradition or family or blessing. This was Zyaire showing me exactly where I stood in his priorities. This was him telling me, in front of everyone we knew, that I would always come second to Alani Wheeler.
I stepped forward, into the light of the ballroom. The movement caught Zyaire's attention, and he turned, irritation flashing across his features at the interruption.
"Ivy," he hissed, "wait your turn."
Wait my turn. At my own wedding.
Something broke inside me then—or perhaps something was finally set free. I straightened my shoulders and lifted my chin.
"Foster," I called out, my voice surprisingly steady. "Foster Campbell."
The room fell silent. Every head turned toward me, then followed my gaze to the back row where Foster sat, confusion written across his handsome face.
"Would you come up here, please?" I continued. "I need you to replace someone."
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