My Fiance Ruined my Wedding, so I Ruined His Life

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My Fiance Ruined my Wedding, so I Ruined His Life

The notification popped up on my screen exactly two hours before I was supposed to walk down the aisle.

I expected a text from my bridesmaid, or maybe a nervous, sweet message from Ridge.

Instead, it was a live stream notification from a local society page.

Breaking: Architect Ridge Ashford Makes Shocking Announcement at His Own Wedding.

The video loaded, and the breath was instantly knocked out of my lungs.

Ridge was standing on the front steps of our venue.

"I owe everyone here, and our families, an honest explanation," Ridges voice echoed through my phone speaker. "This wedding will not be taking place today."

A collective gasp rippled through the crowd of guests gathered on the lawn.

My eyes were locked on the woman standing next to him. She was holding his left hand, her fingers intertwined with his.

It was Lily. My cousin. And she was wearing my dress I was supposed to wear today but she told me it was not good.

"The truth is," Ridge continued, "Camille and I want very different things from life. She is brilliant, but she is... cold. Too focused on the background. I need someone who can stand in the light with me. It wouldn't be fair to either of us to go through with a lie."

He paused, lifting Lilys hand to his lips and kissing her knuckles.

"Lily and I have found something real. Something undeniable. I hope you'll all join me in congratulating us instead."

The crowd erupted into a chaotic mix of murmurs, camera flashes, and scattered, hesitant applause.

I sat there, frozen.

My chest heaved, but no air seemed to reach my lungs. Cold? Too focused on the background?

For six years, I had been the ghost behind his success. I ghostwrote his award-winning speeches. I drafted the blueprints that made his firm a household name, letting him take all the credit because he said it was "better for our future." I bled myself dry to make him shine.

And he used the very venue I built to announce to the world that I wasn't enough.

And Lily... my own blood.

The agonizing, burning pain in my chest suddenly snapped, leaving behind nothing but a hollow, freezing void.

I set the phone face-down on the vanity.

I reached behind my back. My fingers were numb, but I found the zipper. I pulled it down.

The heavy, suffocating fabric loosened. I let the dress fall to the floor, stepping out of it like I was stepping out of a rotting skin.

I picked it up, folded it neatlyonce, twiceand draped it over the velvet armchair in the corner.

My phone began to vibrate. The pity messages were flooding in. Oh my god, Cam, are you okay? Camille, I'm so sorry. Where are you?

I ignored the phone. I walked over to the landline, picked up the receiver, and dialed the front desk.

"Room service," I said, my voice completely flat. "I'd like a medium-rare steak. And a bottle of your strongest red wine."

Ten minutes later, there was a knock on my door.

I opened the door. A man in a sharp, dark suit stood in the hallway. He had silver hair and a face carved from stone.

He raised his hand and extended a small, thick ivory card.

I took it. The handwriting on it was sharp, aggressive, and deeply familiar, even after all these years.

Your father would like to speak with you. It is urgent. E. Calla

My breath hitched.

Elias Calla. My father.

The man who had walked out of my life four years ago. The man who hadn't bothered to call when I graduated, when I won my first underground design award, or when I announced my engagement. He had been a ghost.

And now, on the worst day of my life, he was summoning me.

I looked back into the bridal suite. My phone was still vibrating itself off the vanity. My folded wedding dress sat like a corpse on the armchair.

Outside, Ridge was building a new life on the foundation of my broken one.

I had nothing left here. No tears left to cry. No dignity left to salvage in this room.

I didn't ask questions. I walked to the closet, pulled out a simple black turtleneck and slacks, and changed in silence.

I grabbed my handbag, leaving the engagement ring sitting on top of the folded wedding dress.

I walked out of the room and looked at the man in the suit. "Take me to him."

We walked down the private staff elevator in complete silence. The man opened the door to the black car, and I slid into the backseat. The leather was cold against my skin.

As the car pulled away from the hotel, leaving the chaos of my ruined wedding behind, I stared blankly out the tinted window.

The driver glanced at me in the rearview mirror. His eyes were dark, unreadable.

"Miss Calla," his deep voice broke the silence, sending a strange shiver down my spine.

"What?" I asked, my voice hoarse.

"There is one more thing you should know before we arrive." He gripped the steering wheel, his tone dropping an octave. "You are already engaged."

I froze. My heart stopped beating. "Excuse me?"

The driver didn't blink. "And the ceremony is in three days."

"He has been unresponsive for forty-eight hours."

The voice came from the shadows of the hospital suite.

I didn't turn around. I kept my eyes on the frail, paper-skinned man in the bed. Tubes. Beeping monitors.

Elias Calla. My father.

I stood at the foot of his bed and waited for the tears. The anger. The hollow ache of a daughter losing her dad.

Nothing came.

Then, a violent, suffocating wave of grief hit menot for the man dying in front of me, but for the father he had never been.

I took a slow breath. I locked the grief in a dark box in my mind, and threw away the key.

"Your father and my late husband signed an ironclad alliance five years ago," the voice continued.

Mara Caelum stepped into the light. Icy blue eyes. A charcoal suit that cost more than my ruined wedding. The matriarch of the Caelum Group.

"A merger of our assets," she said, devoid of pity. "Sealed by a marriage. Your cousin, Lily, was the designated bride."

"Lily." The name tasted like ash.

"Yes. But it seems Lily found a more public arrangement this morning." Mara picked up a leather-bound folder. "The Caelum Group does not break contracts. The alliance stands. But the bride must change."

She held out the folder.

A marriage certificate. A prenuptial agreement. My name was already printed on the dotted lines.

"You will marry my son, Nathaniel. You will sit on the board as his proxy. In return, the Caelum family will ensure you are never publicly embarrassed by Ridge Ashford or your cousin ever again."

I stared at the contract.

"Do you have a pen?"

She handed me a silver fountain pen.

I didn't sign the signature line. I flipped to the terms, uncapped the pen, and drew a thick line through the second paragraph.

"I am not doing this as a silent proxy," I said, my voice dead calm. "I want creative directorship of the Caelum Group's architectural division."

Maras eyes narrowed.

I crossed out another paragraph. "I want full asset protection. What I build belongs to me. And," I looked her dead in the eye, "sole guardianship rights over any children produced by this marriage. My blood will not be used as bargaining chips."

Silence.

The corner of Maras mouth twitched into a sharp smile.

"My son chose well. Even if he doesn't know it yet."

She signaled her driver. A revised digital copy was produced on a tablet. I signed it.

"Where is he?" I asked.

Mara gestured to the heavy double doors at the back of the suite.

I pushed them open.

It was colder in here.

Nathaniel Caelum lay in the center of the room. Impossibly beautiful. High cheekbones, dark hair, pale skin.

And completely broken.

A thick tube ran down his throat, breathing for him. Monitors tracked the weak flutter of his heart. The media said the Caelum heir was recovering in private. The reality was right in front of me.

I was marrying a ghost.

I pulled up a chair. I reached out and placed my hand over his limp fingers. His skin was warm.

"I don't need you to love me," I whispered. "I just need you to stay alive long enough for me to build something worth keeping."

An hour later, I was Camille Caelum.

Mara handed me a velvet box. Inside was a flawless, emerald-cut diamond.

I slid it onto my left hand. The metal was ice cold.

I pulled out my phone. Raised my hand against the dark marble wall. Took a single photo.

Caption: Taken.

I hit post.

Three minutes later, the screen lit up.

I swiped accept and pressed the phone to my ear.

"Camille?" He sounded breathless. Frantic. "Tell me that post is a joke. Are you trying to make me jealous with a fake ring?"

"I don't joke, Ridge."

"Look, I'm sorry about today. I really am," his tone softened, shifting into that practiced, manipulative warmth I used to fall for. "I still love you, Camille. You know I do. But I had to do it. I was just saving Lily."

I blinked, staring blankly at the hospital wall. "Saving her."

"Yes! You know her family was going to force her into that arranged marriage with Nathaniel Caelum. The guy is a vegetable, Camille. The whole industry knows he hasn't woken up since that crash. I couldn't let Lily throw her life away on a corpse. My announcement today... it was the only way to get her out of that contract."

"Don't ruin your life over a tantrum," Ridge pleaded smoothly. "Drop this fake engagement stunt. Come back to the firm. We can still be partners and we can still be together until Lily finds someone."

"You're right about one thing, Ridge," I said, my voice eerily calm. "Nathaniel Caelum is incapacitated. Which means his wife now holds full proxy control over the Caelum Group's architectural division."

"What?" Ridge let out a confused, nervous laugh. "What does that have to do with you?"

"Enjoy the wedding venue with Lily," I said. "I built it. But it's the last project you'll ever finish in this city."

I hung up. Blocked the number.

That night, I stood alone in the master bathroom of the Caelum estate.

The silence of the house was deafening.

Suddenly, a violent wave of nausea hit me.

I doubled over the marble sink, gagging. My stomach twisted into aggressive knots.

Its just stress, I told myself. The betrayal. The wedding.

I splashed freezing water onto my face.

Then, it hit again. A sharp, distinct cramping sensation low in my abdomen.

My breath hitched.

I stared at my reflection. Counted the weeks in my head. The missed cycle. The sudden exhaustion I had blamed on the venue construction.

"No," I whispered to the empty room. "No. Not now."

At 2:00 AM, the fluorescent lights of the 24-hour pharmacy felt like an interrogation.

I walked down the empty aisle, my oversized trench coat pulled tight around me, and swept four different brands of pregnancy tests into my basket.

By 2:45 AM, I was sitting on the cold marble floor of the Caelum estates master bathroom.

Lined up on the edge of the sink were four plastic sticks.

Two pink lines.

A blue cross.

The word Pregnant.

Another two pink lines.

I stared at them until my vision blurred. My mind, trained to calculate structural loads and stress points, immediately began doing the math. Six weeks. Maybe seven.

My blood ran cold.

It couldn't be Ridge. We hadn't been intimate in over six months. He had blamed the stress of the firm; I had blamed the exhaustion of designing our wedding venue. Now I knew he had been spending his nights in Lilys bed.

If it wasn't Ridge, then who?

I closed my eyes, pressing the heels of my hands against my temples, trying to force my brain past the fog of the last month.

A memory flickered. Weeks before the wedding.

Lily had handed me a glass of champagne at the rehearsal dinner. To the bride, she had said, her smile perfectly sweet. I remembered drinking it.

I remembered the room suddenly tilting, the suffocating heat, the desperate need for air.

Then, fragments.

Stumbling down a carpeted hallway. A heavy door clicking shut. Waking up in an unfamiliar, dark hotel suite. The scent of sandalwood and rain.

And a voice. A mans voicelow, calm, and laced with something dangerous.

Are you alright?

After that, nothing. Just a heavy, dreamless black, until I woke up the next morning in my own bed, chalking my headache up to pre-wedding nerves and too much champagne.

I opened my eyes, staring at the four positive tests. Horror clawed at my throat.

I didn't know who the father was.

I dragged my knees to my chest and pressed my face into my arms. I allowed myself exactly sixty seconds of sheer, unadulterated panic.

I let the terror wash over me, let my hands shake, let the tears prick my eyes.

When the minute was over, I stood up. I swept the tests into the trash, tied the bag shut, and washed my face.

I was just reaching for a towel when my phone vibrated against the marble counter.

The screen flashed in the dark room. Ridge.

"Camille," he breathed. He sounded frantic, his voice cracking with a desperation I had never heard from him before. "Camille, please. Where are you? Just tell me where you are."

I stared at my pale reflection in the mirror. "Why are you calling me at three in the morning, Ridge?"

"Because I need you," he pleaded. "The firm is a disaster. The investors for the Vanguard project are threatening to pull out because they found out you aren't the lead architect anymore. Please, come home. We can fix this. I'll call off the press, I'll handle Lilyjust come back."

For a second, the sheer audacity of it left me speechless.

Before I could respond, a muffled, whiny voice echoed in the background of his end of the line.

"Ridge? Who are you talking to? Is she going to fix the Vanguard blueprints? My dad is going to kill us if we lose that contract."

Lily.

A bitter, hollow laugh escaped my lips. "You two truly deserve each other."

"Camille, wait" Ridge scrambled, his tone shifting from begging to defensive. "Don't be like this. You owe the firm this much. You can't just abandon the projects we built together!"

"I owe you nothing," I said, my voice dropping to a lethal whisper. "Do not ever call this number again."

"Fine!" Ridge snapped. The mask of the pleading lover vanished, replaced by the vicious, cornered narcissist I now knew he was. "If you won't come home, then I don't have a choice. I'm going to ruin you, Camille. I'll make sure you never work in this city again. After all... you cheated on me first!"

The line went dead.

I lowered the phone, my brow furrowing. Cheated on him first?

I didn't have to wait long to find out what he meant.

At 7:00 AM, my phone began to vibrate violently.

Notifications flooded the screen in a rapid, endless stream. Texts from former colleagues, missed calls from reporters, Google alerts with my name.

I opened the top news notification.

It was a video, leaked anonymously to the city's biggest gossip syndicate. The headline screamed in bold black letters:

THE RUNAWAY BRIDES DIRTY SECRET: ARCHITECT CAMILLE CALLAS PRE-WEDDING AFFAIR EXPOSED.

My heart stopped. I tapped play.

There I was, wearing my white silk evening dress. But I wasn't walking straight. I was stumbling, leaning heavily against the wall, looking completely, hopelessly intoxicated. I looked like a woman who had partied too hard and lost all control.

Then, a man stepped into the frame.

The camera angle cut off his face, showing only a broad shoulder clad in a dark, expensive suit.

He caught me by the waist as my knees buckled.

I leaned into his chest, my hands gripping his lapels. The footage had no audio, but it looked intimate. It looked damning.

The video ended with the man guiding me through the door of Suite 402.

I paused the video, zooming in on the dark, grainy image of the man's hand resting on my waist. A heavy silver watch glinted on his wrist.

My breath hitched. My hand moved instinctively to my flat stomach.

I took a high-resolution screenshot of the frame, focusing on the watch and the distinct, tailored cut of the man's suit. I opened a secure messaging app and attached the image, sending it to Hayesmy oldest friend and the only private investigator in the city who couldn't be bought by Ridge or my father.

I stared at the blurry figure of the man who had taken me into that room. The man whose child I was now carrying.

I typed out a single, definitive command and hit send.

Find me that man.

"Tell me you have a name," I said, skipping the greeting.

"I have better than a name, Camille. I have a paper trail," Hayes's gravelly voice came through the speaker. He sounded slightly out of breath, a rare thing for a man who made a living in the shadows. "The watch in that screenshot isn't just expensive. It's a custom Vacheron Constantin. One of one. Commissioned in Geneva."

"Who bought it?"

"That's the thing," Hayes paused. "It was registered to a private buyer, but the insurance policy attached to the serial number is public record if you know which backdoor to kick in. The policy is held by the Caelum Group."

The floor beneath my feet felt like it was tilting. "Hayes..."

"The registered owner is Nathaniel Caelum, Camille. The man in the video is your husband."

I hung up the phone.

For a moment, I couldn't breathe. My mind, usually a fortress of logic and blueprints, scrambled to build a timeline that made sense.

I unlocked my door and practically ran down the sprawling, silent corridors of the Caelum estate. I didn't stop until I reached the heavy oak doors of the East WingNathaniels medical suite.

I pushed past the private nurse in the antechamber, ignoring her startled protest, and walked into the freezing room.

Nathaniel lay exactly as he had yesterday. Still. Beautiful.

Broken.

I didn't look at his face. I went straight for the mahogany dresser in the corner of the room. When Mara had given me the tour of the estate, she had mentioned this was where they kept his personal effects from the night of the crash.

The things the paramedics had handed over in a plastic bag.

I pulled open the top drawer. Inside sat a black velvet evidence box.

My hands were shaking as I unlatched it.

Inside was a charred leather wallet, a set of bent car keys, and a heavy, silver watch.

The glass face was shattered from the impact of the crash, but the custom band and the intricate, diamond-cut bezel were unmistakable. It was the exact watch from the video.

The timeline clicked into place with the violent force of a falling beam.

The rehearsal dinner had been months ago. Nathaniels near-fatal accident on the coastal highway had happened exactly three days later.

The man who had caught me in the hallway. The man whose voice had asked, Are you alright? The man who had taken me into Suite 402 and given me the child currently growing in my womb... was the comatose man I had just married for convenience.

"What are you doing in here?"

The voice cracked like a whip.

I turned around. Mara stood in the doorway, her posture rigid, her icy blue eyes blazing with a fury I had never seen before. In her hand, she gripped a silver tablet.

The screen was lit up with the leaked security footage and the glaring headline calling me a runaway, cheating bride.

"I brought you into this family to save us from embarrassment, Camille," Mara said, her voice dangerously low as she stepped into the room. "I gave you proxy. I gave you power. And less than twenty-four hours later, you drag the Caelum name through the mud with a leaked sex scandal?"

She threw the tablet onto the foot of Nathaniel's bed.

"Ridge Ashford is already calling my board," Mara hissed. "He is using this video to argue for an annulment. Explain yourself. Right now. Or I will strip you of everything."

I didn't flinch. I didn't apologize.

I walked over to the bed, picked up the tablet, and turned it off. Then, I reached into my blazer pocket.

I walked right up to Mara. I took her hand, turned her palm upward, and placed the shattered silver Vacheron Constantin watch into it.

Mara frowned, looking down at her son's ruined watch.

"What is this?"

"Look closer at the video, Mara," I said softly.

I reached into my pocket one more time. I pulled out the plastic stick with the two glaring pink lines and placed it directly on top of the watch in her hand.

Mara went completely still.

She looked at the pregnancy test. Then at the watch. Then, slowly, her eyes drifted to the man lying in the bed.

I watched the exact moment the matriarch of the Caelum empire put the pieces together. The outrage in her eyes vanished, replaced by a shock so profound it seemed to knock the breath out of her.

Her hand, holding the test and the watch, began to tremble.

"The rehearsal dinner was three days before his crash," I said, my voice steady. "I was drugged. He found me. He saved me." I placed a hand over my flat stomach. "Ridge thinks he leaked a scandal to destroy me. He doesn't realize he just gave me the exact timeline I needed."

Mara looked up at me. The ice in her eyes hadn't just shattered; it had melted into something entirely new.

Something terrifyingly protective.

She looked at my stomach, a single tear escaping her iron-clad control, before she quickly wiped it away. When she looked back at my face, she wasn't a furious CEO anymore.

She was a grandmother looking at the future of her bloodline.

Mara closed her fist around the watch and the test. She stood up straighter, her presence suddenly filling the entire room.

"Ridge Ashford thinks he can use my son's child as a weapon against us," Mara said, her voice dropping to a lethal, absolute chill.

She turned toward the door, pulling her phone from her pocket.

"Mara?" I asked. "What are we doing?"

Mara paused in the doorway and looked back at me, a sharp, bloodthirsty smile curving her lips.

"They wanted a scandal, Camille," she said coldly. "We will give them an execution."

"It has been a difficult week for the Ashford firm," Ridge spoke into the microphone, his voice echoing with practiced sorrow.

"Integrity is the foundation of everything we build. When the video of Camille Callas... indiscretions... came to light, it broke my heart. But I cannot allow her moral failings to jeopardize the Vanguard Project."

Flashes from the press cameras lit up the room.

"Effective immediately, Ashford Firm is formally severing all ties with Camille Calla," Ridge announced, puffing his chest out.

"We are moving forward. With your continued investments, Lily and I will ensure Vanguard is a masterpiece."

The crowd began to politely applaud.

I looked at Mara. She gave me a single, sharp nod.

I stepped out of the shadows and began my descent down the grand velvet staircase. The ten-carat diamond on my left hand caught the chandelier light like a weapon.

Flanking me were six massive Caelum security contractors.

Lily spotted me before Ridge did. Her smug, demure smile instantly vanished, replaced by a flash of panic.

"What do you think you're doing?" Lily hissed, her voice a venomous whisper as she blocked my path. She reached out, her fingers digging painfully into my bare arm, trying to shove me back toward the stairs.

"You have a lot of nerve showing your face here, Camille. You are not on the guest list. Get out before I have you thrown out."

"Let go of me, Lily," I said, my voice dead calm.

"Security!" Lily snapped, ignoring me and turning to the hotel guards. "Remove this woman immediately. She's trespassing and trying to cause a scene!"

The hotel guards stepped forward, but before they could even raise their hands, Mara descended the final few steps, stepping into the light.

The hotel guards froze. Everyone in the city knew the matriarch of the Caelum Group.

Mara didn't even look at Lily. She just snapped her fingers. Instantly, her private security detail surged forward, forming an impenetrable wall between me and the hotel guards.

One of the Caelum men casually swatted Lilys hand off my arm, sending her stumbling backward in shock.

"Don't ever touch my daughter-in-law again," Mara said, her voice dropping the temperature in the room by ten degrees.

Lily gasped, her eyes darting between me, Mara, and the massive diamond on my finger. "Daughter-in-law? What... what are you talking about?"

I didn't bother answering her. I looked past her terrified face and signaled the AV technician we had bought out ten minutes prior.

A deafening screech of microphone feedback ripped through the ballroom. The applause died instantly. Ridge winced, tapping his mic.

"Moral integrity is a fascinating topic, Ridge," my voice boomed through the surround-sound speakers as I took a secondary microphone from a stunned event coordinator.

Every head in the ballroom snapped toward us. The sea of investors parted instantly as I walked past a trembling Lily and marched right up to the stage.

"Camille," Ridge hissed, his face flushing with anger and panic. "What is the meaning of this? Get off my stage!"

"You spoke of my indiscretions, Ridge," I said smoothly, turning my back to him to face the crowd and the cameras.

"You leaked a video of me from the night of my rehearsal dinner, claiming I was having a sordid affair. Let's take a closer look at that, shall we?"

The massive projector screen behind Ridge suddenly flickered.

In its place, the grainy security footage from the hotel hallway began to play. The crowd gasped.

"I was intoxicated," I narrated calmly. "Or, more accurately, I was drugged by the woman currently cowering at the bottom of the stairs."

All the cameras pivoted to Lily, who let out a strangled cry, her face draining of color as she tried to hide behind a pillar.

"But I didn't stumble into the arms of a lover that night," I continued. "I stumbled into the arms of a man who saw a woman in distress and helped her to a safe room."

I snapped my fingers.

The video paused on the exact frame of the man's hand on my waist. The image zoomed in, enhancing the heavy, shattered silver watch on his wrist.

Beside it, a high-resolution, professional photograph flashed onto the screen. It was Nathaniel, wearing the exact same custom suit, the exact same custom Vacheron Constantin watch prominently displayed on his wrist.

The ballroom erupted into chaos. Reporters began shouting, cameras clicking furiously.

"There was no affair," I said, my voice cutting through the noise like glass. "The man who saved me that night was Nathaniel Caelum. My husband."

Ridge gripped the podium, his knuckles turning white. "This is a lie! It's a trick! You're just trying to save your proxy status!"

"Speaking of my proxy status," I smiled. It was a cold, merciless thing. "I reviewed the Vanguard Project's financials this afternoon. You were desperate for funding, Ridge. So desperate, you put your entire firm up as collateral to your investors."

Ridge froze. The panic in his eyes finally tipped over into absolute terror.

"At 4:00 PM today, the Caelum Group bought out every single one of your investors," I announced to the dead-silent room. "We bought your debt. We own the land. We own the Vanguard Project."

"You can't do that!" Ridge shouted, his voice cracking. "That's my project! I'm the lead architect!"

"You were the lead architect," I corrected. "But as the proxy head of the Caelum Group, I find your moral integrity lacking. You are a liability to my assets."

I looked him dead in the eye, letting the weight of my revenge crush him completely.

"You're fired, Ridge. Get off my stage."

We stepped into the back of the waiting Maybach in the crisp night air.

I let out a long, shaky breath, the adrenaline finally beginning to recede. I leaned my head against the cool leather seat. It was done.

Mara poured two glasses of scotch from the car's minibar, handing one to me. "Flawless," she murmured, a terrifyingly proud smile on her face.

Before I could take a sip, Maras private phone began to ring. It was a specific, sharp ringtone. The one reserved for the East Wing medical staff.

Mara set her glass down instantly and answered, putting it on speaker.

"Dr. Evans," Mara said, her voice tight. "Report."

There was a chaotic shuffling sound on the other end of the line. Beeping monitors. The sound of running footsteps.

"Mrs. Caelum," the doctors voice came through, breathless and frantic. "You need to return to the estate immediately."

My heart stopped. I sat up straight, my hand flying to my stomach. "Is he crashing? What's happening?"

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