Abandoned After My Diagnosis, I Hired A Groom For My Last Wedding-Teptep

My fiancé abandoned me after my terminal diagnosis — so I hired a man to stand beside me at the altar as my final wish.

For nearly a year, my wedding had been the one bright thing I could point to whenever life felt ordinary and grey.

It sat in the future like a lit window.

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My fiancé and I had chosen menus, flowers, table cards, music, and the exact shade of green for the ribbon around the bouquets.

He had nodded through appointments, tasted cake with me, laughed when I took the seating plan too seriously, and held my coat while I stood in front of mirrors trying not to cry at how real it all felt.

My dad had paid for most of it before I could protest too hard.

He said fathers were allowed to do one grand thing without being argued with.

The venue was booked.

The dress was hanging upstairs in a white cover.

The catering was arranged for 120 guests.

Invitations had gone out, relatives had booked travel, and my mum had already cried twice in public over shoes and once at my final fitting.

That last fitting should have been one of those silly, glowing memories.

Instead, I remember my mother behind me in the mirror, pressing a tissue to the corner of her eye and saying, “You look lovely, darling,” as if she were afraid the word lovely might break something.

At the time, I thought she was simply overwhelmed.

Now I think mothers sometimes sense storms before anyone else hears thunder.

The appointment that changed everything was on a damp weekday morning.

There was nothing dramatic about the room.

A plastic chair.

A bin tucked in the corner.

A white desk with a box of tissues placed where desperate hands could reach it.

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