I injected the life-saving drug anyway, collapsing in pain as police sirens wailed outside.
"Arrest this psycho!" my ex demanded, pointing at me.
But the officers walked past me to handcuff him, just as a cold, powerful voice cut through the chaos.
"You have five seconds to step away from my wife."
Chapter 1
Angela Carpenter POV:
The world blurred, the white lace of my wedding dress a suffocating shroud as I stood at the altar, watching the man I loved walk away. He wasn't walking towards me. He was walking away with my sister, Christin.
My breath hitched. The grand cathedral, filled with the elite of Connecticut, became a silent echo chamber, amplifying the sound of my own shattered heart. My fiancé, Byron Osborn, heir to the Osborn real estate empire, turned his back on me.
He walked to Christin, who stood sobbing at the side, her face a mask of fragile innocence. He put an arm around her, pulling her close, a gesture of comfort he should have been offering me. He looked at me then, his eyes holding a mixture of pity and something colder, like he was delivering a verdict.
"Angela," he said, his voice carrying clearly through the stunned silence. "I can't marry you today." My world tilted. The air left my lungs.
Christin clung to him, her sniffles growing louder. Byron stroked her hair. He looked back at me, his gaze firm. "Christin needs me. She was sexually assaulted."
The words hit me like a physical blow. Assaulted? Here? Now? My mind raced, trying to grasp the horror, but his next words twisted the knife.
"The stalker was meant for me. This is my fault. And now... she's pregnant." He spoke it like a solemn pronouncement, a heavy burden he was honor-bound to carry.
Pregnant. With his child? No, with a child. A child conceived out of a nightmare, he implied. My vision swam.
He straightened, pulling Christin even closer, as if to shield her from my gaze, from the judgment of the crowd. "I have a moral duty to marry Christin. To give this child a name." His tone was righteous, unwavering.
A moral duty. The words dangled in the air, a cruel parody of the vows we were meant to exchange. He was talking about duty, not love, not the future we had planned.
He looked at me again, his expression softening, but it felt like a condescending pity. "Angela, just... wait a year for me. I'll get divorced. Then we can be together." He said it so casually, as if asking me to wait for a table at a restaurant, not for my entire future.
My mother, a pillar of society, rushed forward, her face etched with horror. "Byron, what are you saying? Angela is your fiancée!"
He held up a hand, silencing her. "This is what I have to do." He pulled Christin towards the side door. The guests watched, frozen. My entire life, every dream, every whispered promise, crumbled into dust around me.
His words rang in my ears: Wait a year for me. A year. For a man who would abandon me at the altar, claiming a moral duty to another woman. It was a vicious joke.
My father, a man of quiet strength, had always told me, "Angela, love is the only true inheritance. Guard it with your life." He had meant real love, not this toxic mockery. He had died a year ago, leaving me fragile and vulnerable, and Byron had promised to be my rock. Now, that rock had shattered me instead.
The world went silent again. The grand organ music, meant to signal our union, felt like a funeral dirge. My hand trembled, reaching for the bouquet of white roses, but my fingers couldn't quite grasp them.
I stumbled back, the weight of his betrayal crushing me. My vision tunneled. A desperate need for him, for his love, for the love I thought we shared, consumed me. I needed him to see my pain, to understand what he was doing. I needed him to choose me.
My mind screamed. I needed to make him see. My hand, still trembling, found the small, ornate letter opener I' d used to open our wedding invitations. It lay forgotten on the small table beside the guestbook. My grandmother had given it to me. "For opening new chapters, my dear," she'd said. It was sharp.
I pressed the tip against my wrist, the cold metal a stark contrast to the burning agony in my chest. A silent plea. A desperate cry for the love I was losing.
Byron, about to exit with Christin, glanced back. His eyes widened when he saw the letter opener, then narrowed. He dropped Christin's hand.
"Angela, what are you doing?" His voice was cold, accusing.
My eyes pleaded with him, willing him to understand. "Byron," I choked out, a raw sob tearing from my throat. "Please. Don't go."
He stepped closer, but his face hardened. "Stop acting crazy, Angela. This is manipulative. Put that down."
Manipulative. Crazy. His words were like rocks thrown at my already broken spirit. The blade pressed harder. A thin line of red welled up, then beaded, then ran.
He saw the blood. His expression didn't change. Not fear, not concern. Just annoyance. "Don't be ridiculous. I'm not falling for this." He turned back to Christin, who was watching with wide, innocent eyes.
"You're making a scene, Angela. This is disgusting," he hissed, his voice low but cutting. "You're bleeding all over my wedding. Christin needs me. Now."
He left. He actually left. He stepped over the threshold, pulling Christin with him, leaving me bleeding and broken, alone in the grand, empty promise of our wedding.
My blood ran down my arm, a crimson river on the pristine white lace. My hand felt numb. My head spun. The cold, analytical part of my brain, the part that would later define my life, registered the shock. He had seen the blood. He had called it disgusting. He had chosen Christin.
His words, like shards of ice, pierced through the fog of my despair. Manipulative. Disgusting. Stop acting crazy. Each word echoed, not softening the pain, but sharpening it, turning it from a dull ache into a searing fire.
The hope, the desperate, foolish hope that he would choose me, that he would see my suffering and return, shattered into a million pieces. It wasn't just my heart that was broken; it was my entire naive understanding of love and loyalty.
I watched through tear-filled eyes as Byron and Christin disappeared through the ornate doors. They didn't just leave me; they took everything. My future, my dignity, even the wedding gifts that now seemed like mocking symbols of a life that would never be mine. My vision swam. The room spun.
In that moment, a chilling clarity washed over me. He wasn't worth it. He wasn't worth any of this. The man I had loved so blindly, so completely, was a hollow shell, filled with self-importance and a terrifying lack of empathy. I was just a pawn in his savior complex.
My hand still clutched the letter opener, but the desperate plea had faded. A cold resolve settled in. I slowly, deliberately, pulled the blade away. The wound stung, burning, but it was nothing compared to the wound in my soul. I wrapped a piece of the delicate lace from my veil around my wrist, stemming the flow. It was a messy, inadequate bandage, but it was mine.
I needed to disappear. To mend. To cease to be the Angela he knew, the Angela he scorned. My future, whatever it was, would not include him. I needed to find a place where his arrogance, his words, his very existence, could not touch me.
I would leave this town, this life. I would go somewhere no one knew my name, no one knew my past. Somewhere I could rebuild, unburdened by his toxic shadow. The blood on my dress was a promise written in crimson. I would never be this broken again.
My chest burned, but it wasn't just the pain of betrayal. It was the first spark of something new. Something fierce.
"You want me to wait a year?" I whispered to the empty aisle, a ghost of a vengeful smile touching my lips. "You'll be waiting a lifetime for me."