The morning light filtered through the gauzy curtains of the bridal suite, casting golden patterns across my custom Vera Wang gown. I stood motionless before the full-length mirror, barely recognizing the woman staring back at me. After six years with Blake, countless nights of reassuring myself that his devotion to Rachel was merely friendship, today would finally prove that I was his choice. His priority. His future.
"You look absolutely stunning, Viv," my maid of honor, Melissa, whispered as she adjusted my veil. "Blake is going to lose his mind when he sees you."
I smiled, though my stomach twisted with a familiar anxiety. Three times during our engagement, Rachel had managed to derail our plans with her conveniently timed "episodes." But not today. Blake had promised me—sworn to me—that nothing would interfere with our wedding.
"The vineyard looks magical," Melissa continued, squeezing my hand. "Like something out of a fairy tale."
From the window, I could see the rolling hills of Napa Valley stretching into the distance, rows of vines gleaming emerald under the April sun. White chairs arranged in perfect rows. The floral arch where Blake would be waiting. Where we would finally become husband and wife.
I twisted my grandmother's ring on my finger—a nervous habit I'd developed over years of waiting for the other shoe to drop, for Rachel to call with another emergency, for Blake to leave me sitting alone at yet another restaurant table.
"It's time," my father announced, appearing at the doorway. His eyes glistened as he took me in. "My God, sweetheart. You're a vision."
As we descended the stairs, the string quartet began playing Canon in D, the notes floating through the air like promises. Through the glass doors, I could see Blake standing at the altar, tall and handsome in his tuxedo. My heart swelled. This was happening. After everything, we were finally here.
The doors opened. My father squeezed my arm reassuringly as we paused at the end of the white runner. Two hundred faces turned toward me, smiles and tears and flashing cameras. I took a deep breath and fixed my gaze on Blake, on his warm brown eyes that had always been my home.
One step. Two steps.
A commotion erupted from the side of the venue. At first, I thought someone had fainted in the heat. Then I heard the gasps, saw Blake's face transform from joy to horror.
And there she was.
Rachel Kim, stumbling across the manicured lawn in a wedding dress identical to mine—down to the custom lace pattern I'd spent months designing. Her face was contorted in anguish, makeup streaking down her cheeks. Before anyone could react, she collapsed to her knees in the center aisle.
"I can't do this!" she wailed, her voice cutting through the stunned silence. "I can't watch you marry her, Blake! I can't live without you!"
Time slowed as she pulled something from her sleeve—a small blade that caught the sunlight before she dragged it across her wrist. Blood bloomed against white satin, vibrant as the roses in my bouquet.
I stood frozen, my father's grip tightening on my arm as chaos erupted around us. Screams. People rushing forward. But all I could see was Blake—my Blake—leaping from the altar not toward me, but toward her.
"Rachel!" His voice cracked with panic as he gathered her into his arms. "Someone call an ambulance!"
Our eyes met across the lawn—his pleading, mine emptying of all emotion. In that moment, with Rachel's blood staining his white shirt, I finally saw the truth I'd been denying for six years.
I would never be his choice.
Blake carried Rachel toward the parking lot, not even pausing to speak to me. His mother hurried after them, already on the phone with their family doctor. The wedding guests stood in shocked clusters, their whispers like insects buzzing in my ears.
With mechanical calm, I walked to the center of the aisle, where drops of Rachel's blood stained the white runner. I looked out at our assembled friends and family, my voice surprisingly steady as I spoke the words that would end this chapter of my life.
"The wedding is canceled. Thank you all for coming."
As I turned and walked away, my veil catching on the rosebushes lining the path, I felt something inside me harden. The Vivian who had endured years of being second place, who had made excuses for Blake's divided loyalty, who had believed love meant sacrifice—she died there on that blood-speckled runner.
In her place stood a woman I barely recognized. A woman who would never again wait for someone who wouldn't choose her first.





