She Left Me At The Altar, Then Crashed My Wedding With His Kids-eirian

The ring hit my forehead before I understood my engagement was over.

For one stupid second, I thought Lauren had dropped it.

Then it bounced off my face, clattered across the church basement tile, and rolled under a folding chair beside a stack of paper plates.

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The wedding coordinator froze with her binder open.

The rehearsal dinner had ended an hour earlier, and most of our families had already gone back to their hotels.

Our wedding was supposed to begin the next afternoon at three.

Lauren stood in the middle of that basement with her arms folded, breathing hard, like she was the one who had been wronged.

“I can’t marry you, Jude,” she said.

I looked at the ring under the chair.

Six months of overtime sat there catching fluorescent light.

I had stayed late at the aerospace plant, taken weekend shifts, skipped lunches, and saved every extra dollar because I wanted to give her something solid.

That was the word I kept building my life around.

Solid.

Solid job.

Solid apartment.

Solid savings account.

Solid woman, I had thought.

Lauren pointed at me like she was finally done pretending.

“I don’t love you,” she said. “I never really did.”

The coordinator whispered Lauren’s name.

Lauren ignored her.

“You were always safe,” she said. “Predictable. A placeholder.”

There it was.

The word that made four years shrink into something she had used until something better came back.

I bent down and picked up the ring.

My forehead throbbed.

My hands were steady.

“This is about Wyatt,” I said.

She almost smiled.

Wyatt was her childhood best friend, the one who had moved back to town half a year earlier and immediately became a third person in our relationship.

He called late.

He texted early.

He needed rides, advice, memories, and private jokes that ended the second I entered the room.

Lauren told me I was insecure.

Now she told me he was her soulmate.

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