My Fiancé vanished before the Wedding
Plot Summary
Three weeks before her high society London wedding, Vivienne's fiancé Silas vanishes. When she tracks him to an Alpine ski chalet, she overhears his cruel plot: he only courted her to humiliate his rival Kaelen, and plans to abandon her at the altar for his secret lover.
Instead of confronting him, Vivienne quietly leaves and returns to London, letting Silas believe she has no idea of his betrayal, preparing to face what comes next.
Search Tags
- Character-oriented: Vivienne, Silas, Kaelen, Vivienne and Silas, Vivienne and Kaelen
- Plot-oriented: what happens to Vivienne in My Fiancé vanished before the Wedding, why did Silas vanish before the wedding
Character Relationships
- Vivienne & Silas: Silas pretended to be Vivienne's gentle, safe fiancé for two years to steal her away from his rival Kaelen. He plans to publicly abandon Vivienne at the altar to humiliate Kaelen, while keeping his secret lover hidden from Vivienne. Vivienne now knows his true plan but hides her knowledge from him.
- Kaelen & Silas: They are bitter rivals. Kaelen has loved and worshipped Vivienne for five years, and Silas deliberately courted Vivienne just to steal her from Kaelen. Silas's ultimate goal is to destroy Kaelen by leaving Vivienne, the woman Kaelen worships, publicly humiliated at the altar.
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Three weeks before our grand society wedding in London, my fianc vanished.
I spent six agonizing days terrified that his high-stakes investment deals had finally gotten him killed. I didn't sleep. I didn't eat. I hired the best private investigators in Europe, throwing my family's money at anyone who could find the man I loved.
Tonight, they found him.
He wasn't dead. He was in the freezing Alpine.
The luxury ski chalet glowed with warm, golden light against the dark, snow-covered mountain. I walked onto the wraparound balcony, my heart pounding against my ribs. I was ready to burst through the glass doors, ready to throw my arms around him and weep with relief.
But my hand stopped inches from the frosted glass.
"So, are you actually going to marry her?" a womans voice purred from inside, dripping with amusement.
"God, no," Silas sneered, the clink of his whiskey glass echoing through the ajar door. "Shes so suffocatingly proper. Once I finally had her, the thrill was entirely gone."
I froze. The air in my lungs vanished.
"Then why keep up the act?" a man asked. "You've been playing the devoted saint for two years, Silas. You even bought the ring."
"Because of Kaelen," Silas stated simply.
The name sent a cold shiver down my spine.
Kaelen. The man who had obsessed over me for five years. The powerful, ruthless man whose intense, suffocating pursuit had terrified me so much that I ran straight into Silass open, waiting arms. I had chosen Silas because he was everything Kaelen was notsafe, gentle, and calm.
"Kaelen treated Vivienne like a literal goddess," Silas continued, his tone sickeningly proud. "He would have burned the world down for her. I only played the perfect, gentle lover to snatch her away from him. I wanted to see the look on his arrogant face when she chose me."
"But you've already won," the woman teased. "Why not just dump her now?"
"Because just breaking up with her isn't enough to crush Kaelen," Silas said smoothly. "Im going to let her put on that custom silk dress. I'm going to let her walk down the aisle in front of all of London's elite. And I just won't show up."
He paused, letting the cruelty of his plan settle over the room.
"Imagine Kaelen's despair," he whispered, a dark thrill in his voice. "The woman he worships, abandoned at the altar, reduced to the ultimate laughingstock of high society."
The room erupted into laughter.
"Just two more weeks of playing the devoted fianc," a woman whispered, her voice thick with longing. Her face was hidden in the shadows, but her hands slid up his chest to tangle in his hair. "And then you're finally mine."
"I've always been yours," Silas breathed.
A soft, breathy gasp escaped her lips as his hands gripped her waist with a hungry, desperate possession he had never shown me.
He pulled her flush against him, the sudden, heavy friction of their bodies drawing a low, guttural groan from his throat.
His mouth crashed down on hers in a deep, devouring kiss. Even through the glass, I could hear the wet, frantic slide of their lips and the heavy, sharp intakes of breath as they broke apart only to clash together again.
She arched into him with a soft, needy whimper, their silhouettes melting together in the firelight in a display of raw, illicit heat.
I stood outside in the dark, the freezing Alpine wind nothing compared to the ice in my veins.
I didn't burst through the glass doors. Tears wouldn't give me back my two years.
Instead, I quietly turned away from the chalet's golden light, walked back into the freezing night, and erased all traces of my trip to France.
The next morning, the soft, golden light of the London sun woke me.
The heavy bedroom door slowly pushed open.
Silas walked in.
He was holding a silver breakfast tray. He looked perfectly disheveledhis hair slightly tousled, a shadow of stubble on his jaw, dark circles under his eyes. It was a masterclass in playing the frantic, exhausted lover.
He clearly had no idea that I had been standing on that freezing balcony in Chamonix twelve hours ago.
He saw me awake, and his face crumbled into a mask of absolute, manufactured relief.
"Vivienne," he breathed, his voice cracking perfectly on my name.
He quickly set the silver tray on the nightstand and dropped to his knees right beside the bed. He reached out, taking my cold hands in his warm ones, gripping them like I was his lifeline.
"I am so, so sorry," he whispered, pressing a desperate kiss to my knuckles.
"Where were you, Silas?" I asked. My voice was completely flat.
"I was in the Scottish Highlands," he lied smoothly, his thumbs rubbing soothing circles into my skin. "I drove up there alone. No phone, no signal. I was just... overwhelmed, darling. The wedding preparations, the pressure at the investment firm. I panicked. I needed a solitary retreat to clear my head so I could be the perfect husband you deserve."
"I know I terrified you," he murmured, his tone dripping with gentle devotion. "I am a fool. But I'm here now. I'm never leaving you again. Can you ever forgive me, my love?"
He reached up, his hand moving to cup my face, his thumb gently brushing my cheek.
The sheer, audacious cruelty of his touch sent a violent jolt through my system. The phantom sound of his cruel laughter in the ski chalet echoed in my ears. Imagine Kaelen's despair. The woman he worships, abandoned at the altar.
He thought I was a fool. He thought he could buy my blind obedience with a silver tray and a few soft words, just to set me up for the ultimate slaughter.
I didn't cry. I didn't scream.
I simply pulled my hand from his grasp, raised my arm, and slapped him across the face.
The sharp crack of the slap echoed violently against the glass walls of the penthouse.
Silass head snapped to the side. He froze, still on his knees, a dark red mark instantly blooming across his pale cheek.
For a fraction of a second, his carefully constructed mask slipped. A flash of genuine, cold fury sparked in his eyes. The gentle, devoted fianc vanished, revealing the ruthless predator I had seen in Alpine.
Before he could speak, before he could unleash that anger, I threw my hands over my face and burst into tears.
"I thought you were dead!" I sobbed, my voice trembling with perfectly manufactured hysteria.
I dropped to my knees in front of him, grabbing the lapels of his expensive shirt. I let my body shake, playing the role of the frantic, heartbroken bride to absolute perfection.
"Six days, Silas!" I wept, my voice cracking. "I hired investigators! I thought your deals went wrong. I thought you were lying in a ditch somewhere, and you were just... hiding in the Highlands?!"
Silas exhaled a long, heavy breath.
The fury in his eyes vanished instantly. In its place was the smug, arrogant satisfaction of a man who believed he had completely won.
He thought my slap was just the hysterical lashing out of a desperate, terrified woman.
He wrapped his arms around me, pulling me tight against his chest.
"I know, darling. I know," he murmured, kissing the top of my head. "I'm so sorry. It's over now. I'm right here."
I pressed my cheek against his shirt, listening to the steady, calm beat of his lying heart. My tears soaked his collar, but my eyes were dead and cold.
The higher she flies, the harder she'll fall.
His friend's advice from the ski chalet echoed in my mind. Silas was playing his part flawlessly.
And so was I.
An hour later, Silas left for his investment firm. He kissed my forehead at the door, promising to bring home dinner from my favorite restaurant.
The second the heavy front door clicked shut, my tears stopped instantly.
The suffocating numbness that had carried me through the morning evaporated. In its place, a sharp, violent rage ignited in my chest.
I walked down the hallway to the guest room and threw open the closet doors.
I unzipped the heavy garment bag and pulled out my custom silk wedding dress. It was flawless.
Pure white. Hand-stitched lace. It was a physical manifestation of the beautiful, safe future I thought we were building together.
I hadn't fallen for Silas because of a fiery, all-consuming passion. I had chosen him precisely because he wasn't fire.
After five years of Kaelen's dark, suffocating obsessiona relentless pursuit that felt like standing on the edge of a violent hurricaneI had been desperate for solid ground. Silas was supposed to be my quiet harbor. He was predictable.
He brought me chamomile tea when I worked late, he listened to my mundane stories about the art gallery, and he never looked at me like he wanted to devour my soul.
I had mistaken his lack of intensity for safety. I had mistaken his carefully rehearsed gentleness for a cure to my trauma.
I had been so eager to escape the monster in the shadows that I happily locked myself in a cage with a wolf in sheep's clothing.
I carried the dress into the center of the room and laid it flat on the hardwood floor.
I walked to the kitchen, grabbed a bottle of vintage red wine from the cellar, and uncorked it.
I walked back to the dress. Without a single tear, without a single ounce of hesitation, I tipped the bottle over the bodice.
The dark crimson liquid splashed against the pure white silk. I watched it spread, soaking into the delicate lace, staining the fabric like fresh blood.
I poured until the bottle was empty, leaving the gown ruined, mangled, and completely unsalvageable.
It was the absolute death of my blind love.
That night, lying awake next to the man who was planning my public execution, the silence of the penthouse felt suffocating.
Silas was fast asleep, his breathing even and deep, his arm draped casually over my waist as if he hadn't a care in the world.
Carefully, holding my breath, I slipped out from under his arm and picked up my phone from the nightstand.
Unable to sleep, I opened an elite, anonymous art forum I frequented. I scrolled mindlessly through the posts, trying to distract myself from the heavy, rhythmic breathing of the stranger in my bed.
Then, my thumb stopped.
A user named Snowdrop had just posted a new picture.
The caption read: [The man I love is supposed to marry someone else this month, but tonight, hes all mine.]
My blood ran cold.
I clicked on the photo. It was taken in a dimly lit room, illuminated only by a roaring fireplace. It showed a mans hand resting high on a woman's bare thigh.
I zoomed in on the man's hand.
On his index finger sat a unique, custom-made obsidian signet ring.
I slowly turned my head, looking at Silass hand resting on the white sheets beside me.
The exact same obsidian ring caught the faint moonlight filtering through the window.
The mattress suddenly shifted.
Silas let out a low, sleepy groan. His arm tightened around my waist, pulling me backward until my spine was pressed flush against his warm chest.
"Vivienne?" he murmured, his voice thick and raspy with sleep. "Darling, why are you awake?"
I quickly locked my phone screen, plunging the room back into shadows.
"Nothing," I whispered, forcing my voice to sound soft, vulnerable, and entirely normal. "I just couldn't sleep."
He shifted closer, burying his face in the crook of my neck.
"Still shaken up about my trip?" he asked gently, pressing a soft, lingering kiss to my bare shoulder. "I told you, I'm never leaving you again."
"I know," I said, staring blankly at the dark wall ahead of me. "I was just thinking about the wedding. About how much things are going to change."
Silas chuckled softly against my skin. It was a warm, comforting sound that made me want to vomit.
"Its going to be the most unforgettable day of our lives," he promised, his thumb tracing soothing circles on my arm. "Everything is going to be perfect."
"I know it will, Silas," I whispered into the dark, a cold, venomous smile finally touching my lips. "I'm going to make sure of it."
The soft chime of the gallery door broke my spiral.
I turned around, pasting on my professional, perfectly composed smile. But the smile died instantly on my lips.
Kaelen stood in the doorway.
He was as imposing and dark as ever, dressed in a sharp, charcoal suit that seemed to swallow the light in the room.
"Kaelen," I said, my voice tight, my hands instinctively gripping the edge of the reception desk. "We're closed for a private viewing."
He ignored me. He walked slowly across the gallery floor, his purposeful strides echoing in the quiet room, until he was standing just inches away.
"Silas is making a fool of you, Vivienne," Kaelen said. His voice was a low, dangerous rumble that vibrated in my chest. "Call off the wedding."
My pride flared, hot and defensive. I already knew Silas was a monster, but hearing it from Kaelenthe man I had spent five years running from, the man whose suffocating obsession had driven me into Silass arms in the first placefelt like a jagged knife twisting in my ribs. I wasn't about to let him gloat over my ruined life.
"What I do with my fianc is none of your business," I snapped, lifting my chin to meet his intense gaze. "I chose Silas. I chose him specifically because he is everything you are not. I wanted peace, Kaelen. Not your suffocating control. And I don't regret it."
Kaelens jaw clenched. A muscle feathered in his cheek, his dark eyes flashing with a dangerous, volatile emotion.
"Loyal to a fault," he murmured, his tone dripping with a dark, bitter pity that made my stomach churn. "Its a shame he doesn't share the sentiment."
Instead of arguing, Kaelen reached into his tailored jacket, pulled out his phone, and turned the screen toward me.
"Look at the man you chose, Vivienne."
It was a video. The background was unmistakablethe snowy, dimly lit balcony of the Chamonix ski chalet. Silas was in the center of the frame. He was laughing, reaching out, and pulling a blonde woman into his arms.
Then, the woman turned her head, laughing as she looked up at him, and the breath was violently punched from my lungs.
It wasn't just a stranger. It wasn't just some random woman from an anonymous forum.
It was Carla.
My maid of honor. My best friend since childhood. The woman who had held my hand while I picked out my wedding dress, who had dried my tears when I was terrified of Kaelen finding me, who had toasted to my "happily ever after" just three nights ago.
Silas slammed Carla against the snowbank, his hands tangling in her familiar blonde hair, and kissed her. It wasn't a gentle kiss. It was hungry, passionate, and entirely willing. She wrapped her arms around his neck, pulling him closer.
The sheer, visceral horror hit me like a physical blow. A double betrayal so profound, so deeply sickening, that the floor seemed to drop out from beneath me.
My chest tightened so violently I couldn't draw a breath. A high-pitched ringing started in my ears, drowning out the ambient noise of the gallery.
My knees buckled.
The gallery walls spun violently around me as my vision faded to black. Before I could hit the hardwood floor, Kaelen lunged forward. His strong arms wrapped securely around my waist, catching me effortlessly against his solid, warm chest.
When I finally opened my eyes, the harsh, bright lights of the gallery were gone.
The room was dim, illuminated only by the soft glow of a bedside lamp.
I was lying in my own bed at the penthouse, the heavy silk duvet pulled up to my chin.
Someone was holding my hand.
"Vivienne, darling!"
I slowly turned my head. He was sitting beside the bed, still in his work suit but looking perfectly disheveled.
"I came home early and found you passed out in the gallery," he lied smoothly, squeezing my hand as if he were terrified of letting me go.
Kaelen must have brought me back and left before Silas arrived.
"The doctor came by," Silas continued, his thumb stroking my knuckles. "He said it was a severe panic attack brought on by exhaustion. You've been overworking yourself with the wedding preparations, my love. You need to rest. I was so terrified."
I stared into his deep, soulful eyes. The eyes that had looked at me with such fake devotion. The eyes that had watched my best friend in the snow just days ago.
A wave of absolute, sickening disgust churned in my stomach. I wanted to rip my hand away.
I wanted to scream at him, to claw at his perfect, lying face.
But I thought of the trap he and Carla had set. I thought of the public humiliation they had planned for me.
So, I forced the corners of my mouth up. I pushed down the bile rising in my throat and forced a weak, grateful smile.
"I'm okay, Silas," I whispered, my voice trembling perfectly, playing the fragile, exhausted bride. "I'm just glad you're here."
"Get some sleep," he murmured softly, brushing a stray lock of hair behind my ear. "I'll be right outside in the study if you need me. Rest well, my little snowdrop."
He stood up and walked out of the room. The heavy door clicked shut behind him.
The air in my lungs instantly turned to ice.
Snowdrop.
Carla's favorite flower. The ones she had insisted we include in my bridal bouquet. The username from the forum.
He had spent so much time with her, so much time wrapping himself in her, that he had carelessly slipped and called me by my best friend's pet name.
A single, agonizing tear slipped down my cheek, hot and bitter against my cold skin.
I sat up slowly, my hands trembling as I reached for the blazer Kaelen had draped over the armchair before he left.
I reached into the pocket and pulled out a sleek, matte-black business card.
I stared at the silver embossed numbers for a long moment. I was about to invite the devil back into my life.
I was about to make a deal with the very monster I had spent five years running from.
But as I looked at the empty space beside me in the bed, I realized the true monsters were already in my life, pretending to love me.
I picked up my phone, dialed the number, and held it to my ear.
It rang only once before a low, dark voice answered.
"I knew you'd call."
I closed my eyes, the heartbreak solidifying into pure, unbreakable steel.
"I agree," I whispered into the dark. "Burn them both to the ground."
I sat at the marble kitchen island, sipping my coffee as Silas walked into the room, his hands hidden behind his back.
He was wearing his tailored suit trousers and a crisp white shirt, looking every bit the devoted, loving fianc.
"I have something for you.
He brought his hands forward and placed a beautifully carved, antique wooden music box on the counter. My breath hitched.
It was a rare, 19th-century piece I had admired in a Mayfair antique shop window months ago, but it had been sold before I could buy it.
"I know you were devastated when you missed out on this," Silas murmured, leaning down to kiss my cheek. "When I was on my Scottish retreat, I spent days tracking down the private collector who bought it. I wanted to give you something special to make up for my absence."
I stared at the intricate woodwork, forcing my face to soften into a mask of touched gratitude. "Silas, its beautiful. Thank you."
"Only the best for my bride," he whispered, stroking my hair. "I'm going to jump in the shower. I'll see you tonight, darling."
He turned and walked toward the master bathroom. A moment later, I heard the heavy glass door slide shut and the water turned on.
I looked down at the music box. Beside it, resting on the marble counter, was Silass smartwatch. He had taken it off to shower.
Suddenly, the small screen illuminated. A new text message had just come through.
I leaned closer. The sender was Clara. My maid of honor. My supposed best friend.
[Hope the idiot liked the music box I found. See you at the office, love.]
An hour later, I pushed through the heavy glass doors of Silass investment firm in the financial district. I had told the receptionist I was surprising my fianc for lunch.
When I walked into Silass corner office, I stopped dead in my tracks.
Clara was sitting on the edge of Silass mahogany desk, laughing brightly at something he had just said. When they saw me, they both jumped slightly, but Silas recovered instantly, his smooth, charming mask sliding flawlessly into place.
"Vivienne! Darling, what a wonderful surprise," Silas said, walking over to kiss me.
"I hope I'm not interrupting," I said, my voice perfectly light and breezy as I looked at Clara.
"Not at all," Clara chirped, hopping off the desk and giving me a tight, familiar hug. She smelled like expensive vanilla and betrayal. "I was just dropping off some files."
"Clara has been an absolute lifesaver," Silas lied smoothly, not missing a beat. "With the wedding coming up, the firm's PR has been a nightmare. I brought her on as a freelance PR consultant to help manage our public image. I wanted to keep it a surprise until her first campaign launched."
"How... resourceful of you both," I murmured, turning my back to them to pretend to admire a large, abstract painting hanging on the wall.
"We make a great team," Clara said behind me.
I kept my eyes on the painting, but my gaze shifted to the dark, reflective glass of the framed artwork. The reflection of the room was clear.
Silas was standing right behind Clara. As she spoke to me, his hand reached out, subtly and intimately trailing down her lower back, his fingers lingering on the curve of her hip.
My stomach violently turned. The sheer audacity of them touching each other in the same room as me was suffocating.
"I actually just remembered I have a meeting with the florist," I lied, turning around with a bright, plastic smile. "I should let you two get back to work."
"Nonsense, let me walk you to the elevator," Silas said, stepping away from Clara. "Actually, give me one second. I need to ask my assistant to print a file for my next meeting. I'll be right back."
He kissed my cheek and stepped out of the office, leaving the heavy oak door slightly ajar.
Clara immediately pulled out a compact mirror from her designer purse, humming happily as she touched up her red lipstick. She didn't even look at me.
I stood by the desk, my hands trembling slightly. My eyes fell on Silass open leather briefcase resting on his chair.
A thick, glossy envelope was sticking out of the side pocket. The gold-embossed logo on the front belonged to one of Europe's most exclusive private aviation charters.
I don't know what possessed me, but while Clara was busy admiring her own reflection, I reached out and silently slid the itinerary out of the envelope.
My heart stopped.
It was a confirmation for a private jet. Two first-class, one-way tickets to Zurich.
Passenger 1: Silas Vance.
Passenger 2: Clara Hayes.
I looked at the departure date. It was the 24th. The exact day of our wedding.
I looked at the departure time. 3:00 PM.
The exact hour I was scheduled to walk down the aisle at St. Paul's Cathedral.
But it got worse.
Clipped to the back of the flight itinerary was a dense legal document. It was a marital asset transfer form, authorizing the complete liquidation of my familys massive trust fund into an untraceable offshore account.
At the bottom of the page was my signature. Flawlessly forged.
"Alright, all sorted," Silass voice rang out as he walked back into the office.
I quickly dropped the papers back into the briefcase, my blood turning to pure, unbreakable ice.
Silas walked over, wrapping his arm around my waist, completely unaware that I had just seen my own execution order.
"I'll see you at home tonight, my love," he smiled, his eyes shining with that perfect, deadly devotion. "I can't wait for our wedding day."
The bridal suite at St. Pauls Cathedral was suffocatingly quiet, save for the rustle of heavy silk.
I stood in front of the floor-to-ceiling mirror, staring at my reflection. The ruined, wine-stained dress was gone, replaced by a sleek, architectural masterpiece of ivory satin that Kaelen had quietly arranged for me. It was sharper, colder, and far more fitting for an execution than a wedding.
Behind me, Clara was practically vibrating with manic energy.
"You look breathtaking, Vivi," Clara cooed, her eyes shining in the mirror. But I could see the frantic, greedy light dancing in her pupils. She thought she had won.
"Thank you, Clara," I said, my voice perfectly soft and oblivious. "I couldn't have done any of this without you."
Claras smile tightened, a flash of smug satisfaction crossing her face. "That's what best friends are for."
Suddenly, her phone buzzed loudly on the vanity. Clara snatched it up, her eyes scanning the screen before she let out a loud, theatrical gasp.
"Oh no!" she cried, pressing a hand to her chest. "Vivi, there's a massive emergency with the caterers. The ice sculptures are melting, and the event planner is having a meltdown. I have to go handle this before the reception."
I turned to face her, playing the anxious bride. "Right now? But the ceremony starts in ten minutes."
"I know, I know!" Clara said, rushing forward to pull me into a tight, suffocating hug. She smelled like expensive vanilla and victory. "I'll be right back, I promise. Just breathe, sweetie. Today is going to be unforgettable."
"I know it will," I whispered against her shoulder.
Clara pulled away, gave me one last beaming, treacherous smile, and sprinted out of the suite. The heavy door clicked shut behind her.
Ten minutes later, the grand, imposing chords of the cathedral organ echoed through the ancient stone walls.
The heavy oak doors opened, and I stepped out into the blinding flash of cameras.
The cathedral was packed to the brim with London's elitepoliticians, socialites, and old-money families. But more importantly, there were cameras everywhere.
At Silass strict insistence, under the guise of "sharing our love with the world," the wedding was being heavily covered by the press and live-streamed to millions.
He had wanted my humiliation to be absolute, inescapable, and permanent.
I kept my chin high as I walked down the long, velvet-lined aisle. The crowd smiled and whispered, admiring the spectacle.
But as I approached the altar, the smiles in the front rows began to falter.
The space beside the priest was completely empty.
I stepped up to the altar and stopped. The grand organ music swelled to its final, triumphant chord, and then... silence.
Everyone was waiting for the breakdown. They were waiting for my hands to shake, for the tears to spill, for me to collapse onto the marble floor and beg someone to find the man I loved.
Instead, I slowly reached up and lifted my veil.
I looked directly into the blinking red light of the primary broadcast camera, and I smiled. Before the crowd could even process my reaction, a deafening crash echoed through the cathedral.
The entire congregation gasped, twisting in their seats.
It was Kaelen.
Dressed in a flawless, custom black tuxedo, he looked like a dark, vengeful god stepping out of the shadows. The frantic whispers in the cathedral instantly died, replaced by a stunned, breathless shock.
The priestwho looked pale and terrified, clearly having already been "spoken to" by Kaelen's mencleared his throat loudly.
"Dearly beloved," the priest stammered, his voice echoing through the microphone. "We are gathered here today to witness the union of Vivienne and... Kaelen."
The crowd erupted into a chaotic frenzy of gasps and murmurs, but Kaelens grip on my hands tightened, anchoring me.
"I do," I said, my voice ringing out clear and steady across the cathedral.
"I do," Kaelen echoed, his voice a low, possessive rumble.
He reached into his pocket and pulled out a massive, flawless diamond ring.
As he slid the cold platinum onto my finger, sealing the legal transfer of my entire trust fund into his impenetrable corporate empire, Kaelen didn't immediately kiss me.
Instead, he reached into his tuxedo jacket with his free hand and pulled out his sleek black smartphone.
Shielding the screen from the prying cameras, he tilted it down so only I could see.
It was a live, high-definition video feed. A hacked security camera from inside the luxurious cabin of a private jet.
"They are watching us right now," Kaelen whispered, his dark voice sending a violent thrill down my spine. "Smile for the cameras, my wife. Let them watch you win."
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