He Bet On An Ugly Bride, Then Her Veil Changed Everything At The Altar-kieutrinh

The church smelled like lilies, candle wax, and expensive perfume trying too hard to cover old wood.

I remember that first because scent has a cruel way of holding on to humiliation.

Years later, I could still walk past a florist’s cooler or sit too close to a burning candle and feel that door under my palm again.

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The side door at St. Monica’s Church should have been shut all the way.

It wasn’t.

A thin crack had been left open between the bride’s waiting room and the small corridor behind the altar, probably by a coordinator rushing with programs or flowers or one more emergency no one would remember by dinner.

That crack changed everything.

I was standing there in my wedding dress, veil down, bouquet cold in my hands, listening for my cue, when Peter Strickland’s voice came through the gap.

“At least it’ll be painless.”

He sounded relaxed.

That was the worst part.

Not drunk. Not nervous. Not angry.

Relaxed.

“Five years, papers signed, and I’m free with the company intact.”

His best man, George Whitman, answered too quietly for me to hear.

Peter laughed like George had said something amusing.

“I’ve seen the photos. Old articles. She’s a strange recluse. No social life.”

The lace of my veil brushed my lips when I inhaled.

It tasted faintly of starch.

I remember thinking how absurd it was that a woman could be dressed in a gown worth more than some cars and still feel like a child hiding behind a door.

Then Peter kept talking.

“Five years pretending to be attracted to someone who’ll probably bore me to tears just by looking at her.”

The words did not hit me all at once.

They landed in the places already weakened by other men’s opinions.

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