
On the eve of our wedding, I was clearing out storage on Sophia’s phone to make room for our professional wedding photos. That’s when I saw it—the “Recently Deleted” folder. At the very bottom lay a dozen screenshots of the same man’s Instagram feed. They were all recent, mundane captures of his daily life: a coffee cup, a blurry sunset, a gym selfie. I handed the phone to her. I didn’t scream. I didn’t throw anything. I just wanted the truth. Sophia stood on the balcony for hours, a silhouette against the city lights. When she finally walked back in, her voice was a raspy whisper. “We had a thing in college. It was a long time ago. I heard he was struggling lately, so I pulled some strings to get him a desk job at the branch office. It was just a favor, Dan. I know who comes first.” Seven years of my life were tied up in this woman. I didn’t want to lose everything over a few screenshots. I wanted to believe her. So, the next morning, I walked into City Hall with her anyway. But just as my pen hovered over the marriage license, Sophia’s best friend, Tiffany, called. The car’s Bluetooth picked it up instantly. “Sophia! Corey found out you’re getting married today. He’s on the roof of his building—he won’t come down! He’s losing it!” The pen jerked, tearing a jagged line through the official document. Sophia bolted upright, grabbing her car keys before the call even ended. “Sophia,” I said, my voice deathly quiet. “If you don’t sign that paper right now, don’t ever bother signing anything with my name on it again.” She didn’t even look back. She sprinted through the heavy glass doors and disappeared. … The air conditioning in the City Hall lobby was aggressive, biting at my skin. The clerk sat there with her hand frozen in mid-air, looking at me with a mix of pity and awkwardness. “Are we… still doing this?” she asked. The couple behind us leaned forward, their impatience radiating in waves. “Hey, buddy, you in or out? We’ve got a reception to get to,” the man grumbled. “Seriously,” his fiancée chimed in. “The girl literally ran away. Why are you still sitting there?” I capped the pen and handed it back to the clerk. “We’re not. Please cancel the application.” The clerk blinked, her mouth opening as if to offer a platitude, but she thought better of it. I took the torn marriage license, ripped it down the middle, and walked out without looking back. The sunlight outside was blinding, cruel in its brightness. I hailed a cab. “The Heights,” I told the driver. When I pushed open the door to the apartment we had spent months decorating, the color white hit me like a physical blow. White roses, white ribbons, white guest favors. A pair of custom-made bride and groom teddy bears sat on the sofa, mocking me. The coffee table was buried under a mountain of invitations and silk-wrapped boxes. My phone buzzed. I slid the screen open. Tiffany had just posted on her Instagram Story. In the photo, Sophia was huddled over a man in a white shirt, frantically rushing him into an Emergency Room. The camera only caught the back of Sophia’s head, but you could see the desperation in the way she shielded his head with her hands. The caption read: First love is the only love that leaves a scar. Ten years of ‘companionship’ can’t compete with a soulmate. A few of our mutual friends had already liked it. I stared at the image for a full minute, then, with a steady thumb, I tapped the heart icon. I closed the app and tossed the phone onto the sofa. I stripped off the custom-tailored white shirt I’d bought specifically for today and changed into a plain black tee and jeans. I headed straight for the hotel downtown. At the front desk, I didn’t hesitate. “I need to cancel the wedding banquet for tonight. I’d like a refund on the deposit, returned to the original card.” The manager’s professional smile faltered. He checked the reservation and looked up at me, confused. “Sir, you didn’t get the message?” I frowned. “What message?” “About thirty minutes ago, a Miss Sophia Miller called. She didn’t cancel. She changed the event name to a ‘Recovery Celebration’ for a Mr. Corey Donald.” A cold laugh bubbled up in my chest. She ditched our wedding to save her ex, and then tried to use my money to throw him a party. “That $15,000 deposit came from my personal account. My name is the only one on the contract,” I said, my voice dropping an octave. “Who authorized a change to the nature of the event without my signature?” The manager started sweating. “Well, Miss Miller said you were as good as married… that her word was yours…” “We aren’t married,” I interrupted. “Refund the $15,000 to my account immediately. Now. Or I’m calling my lawyer and the police to report a fraudulent unauthorized transaction facilitated by your staff.” The manager’s face went pale. He grabbed his radio and called the finance office. Within two minutes, my phone pinged with a banking notification. As I turned to leave, a commotion broke out at the entrance. A group of women walked in, armed with bundles of balloons and streamers. Leading the pack was Tiffany. She was carrying a massive bouquet of red roses, looking like she was on a mission of mercy. “Dan? What are you doing here?” she asked, her voice dripping with artificial sympathy. She tossed the roses onto a nearby chair. “Sophia asked us to come early to redecorate. Corey just had his stomach pumped; he’s incredibly fragile. Sophia wants to throw him a little ‘welcome back to life’ party to lift his spirits.” She looked me up and down, her lip curling. “You were always too controlling, Dan. Too intense. Corey has clinical depression—he almost died because he couldn’t handle losing her. You’ve had seven years with Sophia. You can handle losing one day.” I looked at Tiffany’s smug, self-righteous face. I walked over to the refreshments table, picked up a glass of red wine intended for the guests, and walked back to her. She was still talking. “Corey said his biggest regret was never seeing her in a white dress, so Sophia said tonight—” I threw the wine directly into her face. Tiffany shrieked, clutching her eyes as the dark red liquid soaked into her designer dress. Her friends scrambled forward with tissues, gasping in horror. “Tell Sophia the banquet is cancelled,” I said. “If she wants to throw a party for her side-piece, she can find her own damn money to pay for it. And as for you—if you ever show your face near me again, it won’t be wine. It’ll be boiling water.” I walked out of the hotel, ignoring the screaming behind me. The moment I stepped onto the sidewalk, the sky opened up. A torrential downpour slammed into the pavement. I pulled out my phone to call an Uber, but the wait time was over forty minutes. I decided to walk to my office a few blocks away just to get out of the rain. But as I crossed the second intersection, a white-hot pain seared through my abdomen. I leaned against a bus stop sign, my vision blurring into static. My legs gave out, and I slumped into the freezing puddles on the sidewalk. Before I lost consciousness, I heard a distant voice shouting, “Call 911! Someone’s down!” When I woke up, I was staring at the sterile white tiles of a hospital ceiling. A doctor in a white coat was standing over me, flipping through a chart. “You’re awake. How are you feeling?” I struggled to sit up, clutching my stomach. “What happened?” “Exhaustion, severe dehydration, and an acute stress-induced gastric episode,” the doctor said, adjusting his glasses. “We need to run more tests, but you’re in bad shape. Where’s your family?” I opened my mouth, but no sound came out. The door burst open. Sophia rushed in, breathless. She marched to my bedside, and the moment she saw me leaning against the pillows, her brow furrowed into a knot of frustration. “Dan, are you serious right now? Is this enough?” She didn’t ask how I was. She didn’t ask why I was hooked up to an IV. She went straight to the interrogation. “Corey just stabilized. Why did you ‘like’ Tiffany’s post? He saw your notification and it triggered him. He started crying and trying to pull his IV out!” She pointed toward the door, her chest heaving. “You need to come downstairs to his room right now and apologize. Tell him the wedding didn’t happen so he can rest in peace.” I looked at this woman. I had loved her for seven years. I knew every curve of her face, yet the expression she was wearing was so alien it terrified me. I let out a jagged, hollow laugh. “Sophia… I’m in a hospital bed.” She paused, her eyes flickering to the tubes in my hand. Her voice softened, but only by a fraction. “I know you have a fever because of the rain, but Corey has a mental illness. He could die. You’re strong, Dan. You’ll be fine after a couple of bags of saline. Corey is different.” She sat down, sighing as if she were the one being inconvenienced. “You’ve always been the sensible one. Just do this for me. Corey feels so insecure. I’m thinking of buying him that small studio apartment downtown—putting it in his name. If he has a home, he’ll heal faster.” She looked at me, her tone completely matter-of-fact. “As for our wedding… let’s just push it back a year. Once Corey is stable, we can talk about us again.” My stomach turned. Seven years. From college dorms to the corporate grind. We had shared ramen, cramped studio apartments, and saved every penny for our first down payment. I thought we were a team. I pulled my hand out of hers and pointed at the door. “Sophia, you don’t love me anymore.” Her face hardened. She stood up. “Don’t be dramatic, Dan! He’s a patient! He needs me right now, and I can’t just abandon him.” She ran a hand through her hair, agitated. “Just calm down. I’ll check on you later.” She walked out without looking back. The next morning, I checked myself out against medical advice. I took my discharge papers and went down to the lobby to settle the bill. Passing a private room on the corner, I saw them. Sophia was sitting by the bed, holding a bowl of soup. She was blowing on a spoonful, her expression tender and focused. Corey was propped up on pillows, looking pale and fragile. He opened his mouth and took the soup from her. “This is so good, Sophia. Did you make it yourself?” She wiped a stray drop from his chin. “If you like it, I’ll make it for you every day.” I stood in the hallway, my fingers crushing the hospital bill. Seven years. Every time I had the flu or a migraine, Sophia would just order DoorDash. She always said she couldn’t even boil an egg without burning it. It turned out she could cook. She just didn’t want to cook for me. Corey glanced toward the door and saw me. He let out a sharp cry, flailing his arms and knocking the bowl out of Sophia’s hands. He scrambled under the covers like a terrified child. “Dan… don’t be mad at her. It’s my fault. I shouldn’t be sick. I shouldn’t be a burden.” Sophia didn’t even notice the hot soup splashing onto her own hand. She gathered Corey into her arms, stroking his hair to calm him. Then she turned and glared at me with pure venom. “Dan! Is there no end to this? I told you to stay in your room! Why are you stalking us?” She stormed over and shoved my shoulder. Hard. I was still weak. I stumbled back, my lower back slamming into the sharp edge of the hallway railing. A jolt of agony shot through my gut. I slid down the railing, clutching my stomach, gasping for air. Sophia froze for a second, her hand reaching out as if to help, but then Corey started sobbing again. She pulled her hand back, her face twisting into a mask of annoyance. “Stop acting. I didn’t even push you that hard. Just go home, Dan. Stop making a scene in a hospital.” I grit my teeth, forcing myself to stand despite the cold sweat breaking out on my forehead. “Sophia, look at the paper.” I held up the bill. “I was on my way to the cashier. I have zero interest in your little melodrama.” I didn’t wait for her response. I walked toward the elevator. That night, I went back to the apartment. I had just finished showering when my phone lit up. A Venmo notification from Sophia: $100. Then came two voice notes. “I was stressed earlier. I shouldn’t have pushed you. Use that money to get that lobster bisque you love. Consider it an apology.” I listened to the message, staring at the $100. I typed out a single sentence: I’ve been deathly allergic to shellfish for the entire seven years we’ve been together. You never remembered. She replied almost instantly: Sorry, I’m just exhausted. My head is spinning. I’ll go to the mall tomorrow and pick out something nice for you. Just stay home and wait for me. I didn’t reply. I threw the phone on the bed. Sophia didn’t come home that night. I lay in the dark, staring at the ceiling until 2:00 AM. Then, I got up, went to the storage closet, and pulled out several large moving boxes. I started with my life. My clothes, my books, my laptop. I stood in the living room and looked at the charcoal grey sofa. We had spent three weekends picking that out. The 75-inch TV—we’d saved our bonuses for six months to buy it. I remembered the day it was delivered; Sophia had danced around the room. Back then, her eyes were full of light. Now, the house was still here, but the light was gone. I swept the “His and Hers” mugs off the counter into a trash bag. I took down every framed photo of us and threw them into a box marked “Junk.” By dawn, the apartment felt hollow. My heart felt the same. I taped the last box shut and wiped the dust from my hands. The sun began to bleed over the horizon. I took a long, deep breath and let it out. I was done. At 9:00 AM, the movers arrived. They began hauling my boxes and my furniture out. The door was propped open when my soon-to-be mother-in-law walked in, carrying a bag of groceries. Her face dropped. She slammed the groceries onto the table. “Dan? What the hell is this?” “Sophia didn’t tell you? The wedding’s off,” I said, not looking up from my clipboard. “So she missed one appointment because she was busy! You’re going to tear the whole house apart over that?” she screamed at the movers. “Put that down! Who told you you could take that?” She turned back to me, her voice sharp. “You’re twenty-seven, not a child! Call Sophia right now and stop this before you make our family the laughingstock of the neighborhood!” I didn’t even bother arguing. “Keep moving,” I told the guys. “Take the desk next. Careful with the corners.” Footsteps echoed in the hall. Sophia walked in, leading Corey by the hand. He looked perfectly fine today, dressed in a fresh button-down. Sophia ignored the movers entirely. She led Corey to the center of the room. “Corey, look around. The furniture is all high-end. Pick whatever you like, and I’ll have it moved to your new place.” Her mother blinked, looking between Sophia and Corey. “Sophia… who is this?” “Just a colleague, Mom. He just got out of the hospital, I’m helping him get settled.” Corey broke away from her and walked to my bedroom door. He pointed at the mahogany standing desk—a custom piece I’d flown in from an artisan in Vermont. Sophia hadn’t paid a cent for it. “I like this one, Sophia. This would look great in my study.” I stepped in front of him. “That’s mine. Nobody touches it.” Corey’s lower lip trembled. He grabbed Sophia’s sleeve. “Maybe I should just go. I’ll just buy something cheap at IKEA. I don’t want to cause trouble.” Sophia’s face darkened. She stepped toward me, her hand raised to shove me again. “Dan, don’t be so petty. I’ll Venmo you the cash for it, for God’s sake!” Before she could touch me, a shadow fell over the doorway. My father came charging in, face red with fury. Without a word, he swung. SLAP. The sound of his hand hitting Corey’s face echoed like a gunshot. Corey hit the floor, wailing. My father pointed a trembling finger at Sophia. “You ungrateful, heartless girl! My son gave you seven years of his life, and you not only ditch him at the altar, you bring your little pet into his home to scavenge his things? Do you think he has no one left in his corner?” Seeing Corey on the floor, Sophia’s eyes turned murderous. She helped him up, shielding him, and then she actually squared up to my father, her fist clenched. I grabbed a heavy porcelain vase from the entryway table and smashed it at her feet. She jumped back, startled. I stepped into her space. SLAP. SLAP. SLAP. Three strikes. Every ounce of my betrayal, my wasted years, and my physical pain went into those hits. Sophia was stunned. she stumbled back, clutching her reddening cheeks. “Dan! Have you lost your mind?” she screamed, the veins in her neck bulging. “It’s just a wedding! Corey didn’t do anything wrong! You’re trying to kill him!” I looked at her distorted, ugly face and felt nothing but cold, hard clarity.
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