I thought the strangest thing about my wedding day would be getting married in a hospital. I was wrong. Two minutes before the vows, a smiling grandmother grabbed my arm and whispered something that made my knees buckle. My fiancée had deceived me, and the reason behind it shattered my heart.crsaid
When Anna said yes to marrying me, I felt like the luckiest man alive.
We had both grown up in an orphanage. She was the only person who truly understood the quiet parts of me… the deep ache of being unwanted.
I believed we wanted the same life: a stable home, a table that never went empty, and children who would never have to survive the way we did.
But then things started to feel off.
“I want us to get married in a hospital,” Anna said one evening.
I stopped mid-bite.
“A hospital? Why would we celebrate there?”
Her tone was soft but unwavering. “You’ll find out later, Logan.”
“Later? Anna, that’s not a wedding venue. That’s a place for surgeries and bad news.”
“Please,” she said, finally meeting my eyes. “Just trust me on this.”
She refused to say anything more.