I Was Forced to Sit Alone at My Sister’s Wedding – Then a Stranger Said, “Act Like You’re With Me”
The Breaking Point and a Mysterious Offer
The breaking point came during the bouquet toss.
“All the single ladies to the dance floor!”
the DJ announced with enthusiasm that felt like mockery.
I tried to hide behind a marble pillar, but Marian spotted me and grabbed my arm.
“Come on Hannah, this could be your lucky day!”
I found myself pushed into a circle of 20-something women who giggled and squealed as Lydia prepared to throw her bouquet. These were Richard’s younger cousins, fresh out of college with their whole lives ahead of them.
Standing among them, I felt ancient and desperate. Lydia looked directly at me, smirked, and deliberately threw the bouquet in the opposite direction.
A 24-year-old named Chloe caught it while the crowd cheered. Lydia hugged her and announced, loud enough for everyone to hear,
“Looks like Hannah will have to wait a little longer.”
The laughter that followed felt like glass scraping against my skin. I saw people looking at me with that mixture of pity and relief that comes from witnessing someone else’s humiliation.
I retreated to my table, fighting back tears of rage and embarrassment. This was supposed to be a celebration of love, but Lydia had turned it into a public execution of my self-esteem.
That’s when I seriously considered leaving, just disappearing before anyone noticed I’d gone, before I gave Lydia the satisfaction of seeing me cry. I was gathering my purse when a deep voice spoke quietly behind me.
“Act like you’re with me.”
I turned around, startled to see a man in an impeccably tailored charcoal suit. He was tall, probably 6’2″, with dark hair and the kind of confident presence that made people notice him across a room.
His eyes were kind but determined, and there was something magnetic about the way he carried himself.
“Excuse me?”
I whispered back.
“Your sister just spent 10 minutes telling my business associate about how worried she is about you being alone,”
he said
sliding into the chair next to me with fluid grace,
“I’m guessing you didn’t ask her to share your personal life with strangers.”
He was right. I could see Lydia across the room gesturing in my direction while talking to a group of Richard’s colleagues, probably explaining how sad it was that I couldn’t find anyone to love me.
“You don’t mind, do you?”
he asked
though his tone suggested he was already committed to whatever plan he had in mind.
I shook my head, too surprised to speak. For the first time all evening, I didn’t feel invisible.
“I’m William,”
he said
extending his hand with a warm smile,
“Richard’s cousin from Boston, and you’re Hannah, the sister who apparently needs saving from eternal spinsterhood.”
Despite everything, I laughed.
“That’s me, the family charity case.”
“Well, not anymore,”
he said with a smile that was both reassuring and slightly mischievous.
Keeping Her Guessing
William draped his arm casually along the back of my chair and leaned in to speak to me like we’d known each other for years. Almost immediately, I noticed heads turning in our direction.
Lydia, mid-conversation with the wedding planner, did a double take when she saw us. Her smile faltered for just a moment before she excused herself and started walking toward our table, her train trailing behind her like a weapon.
“Hannah,”
she called out
her voice an octave higher than usual,
“I didn’t know you knew William.”
“Old friends,”
William said smoothly
his hand touching mine on the table,
“We lost touch for a while, but you know how these things go.”
Lydia’s eyes narrowed slightly, her perfect wedding composure cracking just enough to show her confusion.
“Really? Hannah never mentioned you.”
“I try to keep my private life private,”
I said
finally finding my voice and some of my confidence,
“You know how I am about work-life balance.”
The irony wasn’t lost on me. Lydia had spent the entire evening broadcasting my lack of a love life, and now she was fishing for details about a relationship that didn’t exist.
“How wonderful,”
Lydia said
though her tone suggested it was anything but,
“How long have you two been reconnecting?”
“Long enough,”
William said with a smile that gave away nothing and everything.
As Lydia walked away, clearly frustrated by the lack of information, William turned to me with a conspiratorial whisper.
“She looks like she just bit into a lemon,”
he said.
I couldn’t help but smile.
“She’s not used to not knowing everything about my life or having me upstage her in any way.”
“Good,”
he said,
“Let’s keep her guessing.”
