Her fingers tightened on her bouquet of white peonies, the stems digging into her palm. The air, thick with the scent of lilies and old stone, was heavy in her lungs. She could feel hundreds of pairs of eyes on her, their pity a physical weight on her skin.
The priest, a kind-faced man with weary eyes, leaned in. "Perhaps we should wait a few more minutes, my child?"
Stella shook her head, a small, sharp movement. "He'll be here." The words were an assertion, not a prayer. She would not allow herself to believe he would do this to her. Not today.
A commotion erupted at the back of the church. A side door opened and Brandon's younger brother, his best man, stumbled in. His face was pale, his tie askew. He didn't look at the guests. His eyes, a miserable mix of guilt and apology, were fixed only on her.
He rushed down the aisle, his polished shoes echoing on the marble. He stopped in front of her, his gaze dropping to the floor.
"Stella," he whispered, his voice cracking. "He's not coming."
The world tilted. The stained-glass windows blurred into a smear of color.
"He said... he said he's sorry," his brother stammered, forcing his eyes to meet hers. "He can't marry you. He's with Amber. He said he loves her."
Amber. Her best friend. The name landed, and the air left her lungs in a silent rush. It couldn't be.
The whispers in the pews swelled into a wave of shocked gasps. The sound washed over Stella, distant, as if she were underwater. Five years of her life, every sacrifice for Brandon's career, every late night of support, all of it collapsed into this single, public humiliation. She was a joke. A charity case left at the altar.
She forced her spine to straighten. She would not faint. She would not cry. Not here.
Beneath her bouquet, her phone vibrated. A blocked number. Her hand was steady as she pulled it out. She answered, pressing the cold screen to her ear.
"Don't wait for him, Stella."
Amber's voice, sickly sweet and dripping with triumph, slithered through the line. "Brandon's with me now. Where he's always wanted to be."
Stella's stomach clenched. All the little moments of suspicion she had brushed aside-the late-night texts, the private jokes-slammed into place.
"He's right here beside me," Amber cooed, and the rustle of sheets was audible. "He feels terrible, of course. But he said he just couldn't lie to himself anymore. He loves me, Stella. He always has."
Each word was a precise, calculated incision. A wave of nausea rolled through her.
She hung up.
The humiliation was a fire that burned away everything else, leaving only a cold, clear certainty.
She would not be the tragic figure in their story.
Taking a deep, steadying breath, she turned to face the stunned crowd. Her voice, when she spoke, was perfectly even.
"Brandon Price will not be joining us."
A collective gasp rippled through the cathedral.
She lifted her chin, her eyes scanning the sea of faces. "But I came here to get married today." Her voice gained strength, laced with an ice-cold, reckless resolve. "And I will."
Before anyone could react, she gathered the heavy skirt of her gown and walked. She did not run. She walked down the aisle, head held high, leaving the whispers and the wreckage of her old life behind her.
The heavy oak doors swung open, the bright New York sun momentarily blinding her. As her vision cleared, she saw a cluster of men in sharp suits huddled around a black sedan parked at the curb. They looked frantic, one of them pacing, phone pressed to his ear.
The man leading the group, tall and impeccably dressed, looked up. His eyes widened when he saw her, a bride emerging from the cathedral alone. He looked less shocked than... relieved. As if he'd just found the answer to an impossible problem.
Their eyes met across the sun-drenched plaza.
A wild, improbable idea sparked in the ashes of her life. It was insane. It was unthinkable.
It was perfect.
She was done being chosen. From now on, she would do the choosing.
She started walking toward them.