Bride Left At The Altar Exposed The Fortune Behind His Family Name-yumihong

Emily Carter was already dressed as a bride when Michael Arriaga told her she was too poor to become his wife.

The chapel bells were ringing outside the wooden doors, bright and sharp in the late-morning air, and the sound came through the hallway like a promise that had not yet learned it was about to be broken.

More than two hundred guests waited inside.

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There were white flowers on the aisle, a string quartet near the front, polished shoes under polished pews, and the kind of quiet that only happens when a room is waiting to turn one woman’s life into a picture.

Emily stood in the side hall with her bouquet in both hands.

The roses smelled sweet, the stems were damp under her fingers, and the lace at her wrists scratched gently every time she breathed.

She kept telling herself it was nerves.

She kept telling herself love was stronger than money, stronger than a family name, stronger than a mother-in-law who had looked at her like a stain from the first day they met.

Then Michael walked in.

He was already pale.

She noticed that first, because when you love someone, you notice the small things before the disaster reaches your ears.

His bow tie was slightly crooked.

His hands were not steady.

He did not reach for her.

“Emily,” he whispered.

She smiled because she thought he was overwhelmed.

She thought he might cry.

She thought, foolishly and sweetly, that maybe this was the moment they would laugh about later, when they were old enough to forgive every hard beginning.

“I’m sorry,” he said. “I can’t marry you.”

The words did not enter her all at once.

They seemed to hang there between the flowers and the chapel doors, too ugly for the place where they had been spoken.

“What?” she asked.

Michael looked past her shoulder, then down at the floor.

“My parents are completely against having a poor daughter-in-law.”

For a moment, Emily heard nothing.

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