I stood in my wedding dress when the man I loved erased our future with one sentence. The chapel bells were already ringing when Adrian Vale looked into my eyes and quietly said, “I’m sorry, but I can’t marry you. My parents are categorically against such a poor daughter-in-law.”
For one suspended moment, the entire world became silent.
Behind him stood his mother, rigid and regal like a queen carved from ice, pearls shining against her throat. His father adjusted his gold cufflinks with bored impatience. Beyond the chapel doors, the organ played softly while two hundred guests waited for me to become part of the Vale family.
Adrian couldn’t even meet my eyes for long.
“Say something, Clara,” he muttered.
I looked at the man who had sworn he would love me forever, then at the parents who had never truly hidden their contempt.
Mrs. Vale stepped forward first. “Don’t make this more unpleasant than necessary. We’ll reimburse the dress.”
That humiliation hit harder than the betrayal itself.
I had sewn my mother’s old lace into that gown with my own hands.
Mr. Vale smiled thinly. “You’re young. You’ll recover. Women like you always do.”
Women like me.
Poor. Quiet. Thankful.