
Hazel’s wedding day was everything she had dreamed of—until a mysterious woman stormed in, claiming to be Sam’s wife. What began as a celebration quickly unraveled into a moment that could destroy everything. But love has a way of surprising us, and sometimes, what seems like an ending is really the start of something even more beautiful…
I sat before the mirror, my fingers lightly tracing the delicate lace of my wedding dress, following the tiny floral patterns stitched into the fabric.
Today was the day.
I took a deep breath, the air thick with the scent of peonies and roses from the bouquet resting nearby.
I was marrying Sam.
The love of my life.
The boy who once handed me a single daisy in the middle of a summer rainstorm, grinning like he’d plucked the sun itself just for me. The man who knew my coffee order—right down to the extra shot of vanilla—before I even realized I had a usual.
The man who kissed my forehead every night, no matter if we were wrapped in laughter or weighed down by an argument.
I knew him. I knew his steady hands, his quiet strength, and the way his eyes always softened when they found mine across a crowded room.
Sam was my safe place.
A tear welled in my eye. I laughed at myself and dabbed it away.
“Careful,” Lauren, my maid of honor, teased from the doorway, holding out a champagne flute. “We didn’t spend all that time on your makeup just for you to cry it off.”
I took the glass, shaking my head.
“I just… I can’t believe this is real,” I whispered.
“You’re about to be a wife,” she grinned.
A wife.
The word sent a thrill through me. Because this wasn’t just a wedding.
It was our wedding. Our new beginning.
In thirty minutes, I would walk down the aisle to the man I’d loved for what felt like forever.
Everything was perfect. The music, the flowers, the soft hum of guests settling into their seats.
I stood at the altar, heart pounding, bouquet in hand, eyes locked with Sam—my fiancé of five years.
We were just seconds away from forever.
I’d pictured this moment a thousand times: the way he’d look at me when I said “I do,” how his voice would sound promising to love me for the rest of his life.
Then, the door creaked open.
The sound sliced through the silence like a blade, and all heads turned.
A woman entered.
Each step echoed—deliberate, confident. She was striking, with long dark hair cascading over one shoulder and bold red lips.
But it wasn’t her beauty that chilled me.
It was the way she looked at Sam.
My Sam.
“Aren’t you going to tell them?” she said, her voice smooth and sure.
My fingers tightened around my bouquet.
“Tell us what?” I managed.
She didn’t even glance at me. Her eyes never left Sam.
“That you’re already married,” she said.
Gasps spread through the room like ripples in water. My breath caught. My flowers suddenly felt like weights in my hands. My engagement ring burned on my finger.
I turned to Sam, waiting for him to laugh, to shake his head—anything to tell me this was a mistake.
But he didn’t.
Instead, he stepped toward her.
My heart slammed against my ribs.
The room buzzed with whispers. I saw my mother clasp her hand over her mouth. My bridesmaids stood frozen, bouquets lowered.
And then, in front of everyone, Sam wrapped his arms around her.
The world tilted.
I couldn’t move. Couldn’t speak. I just stared as his lips moved—whispering something only she could hear. She laughed.
It felt like the ground gave way beneath me.
When Sam turned back to me, his face was unreadable.
Regret? Guilt? Betrayal?
“I…” he began, running a hand down his face. “Hazel, I can explain.”
“You…” My voice cracked. “You’re married?”
“No,” he said carefully. Too carefully. He was choosing his words.
“Not exactly.”
The woman—this stranger who had just shattered my world—laughed softly.
“That’s one way to put it.”
I turned to her, my voice trembling. “Who are you?”
Her eyes finally met mine. And something softened.
“I’m Anna.”
The name struck a chord. It echoed in my mind.
Sam had mentioned her before. A childhood best friend. Someone he’d been close to for years. But never—not once—had he said they were married.
I felt sick.
“Sam,” I said. “Tell me the truth. Right now. In front of everyone.”
He hesitated, then sighed.
“When we were kids, we had a pretend wedding,” he said. “Ring pops, scribbled vows, Anna playing ukulele. We thought it was real. We were twelve.”
Leave a Reply