Chapter One – The Day Joy Died
The air smelled of roses and champagne. Laughter shimmered through the golden hall, chandeliers spilling light over rows of smiling faces. For once, I believed I had outrun my past. Today, I wasn’t the unwanted daughter, the whispered scandal—I was a bride. I had fought so hard to get here, and it felt like finally, I belonged.
The music swelled, notes curling through the air like warm silk. Every petal, every flicker of candlelight, every smile—it all seemed like proof that my life had finally turned right. At the altar, Reed Brown stood tall, hands slightly trembling, eyes softening whenever they met mine. He was calm, composed, but I saw it—nervousness, a quiet awe, like he still couldn’t quite believe this day was real. I had been waiting for this moment, and so had he, or so I thought.
The officiant’s voice cut through the hum of excitement, solemn and serious.
“Is there anyone here who objects to this union? Speak now, or forever hold your peace.”
A hush fell. I felt the room pause, every heartbeat somehow synced to mine. My pulse raced. Relief washed over me. No one would dare.
Then a voice—soft, deliberate, like a blade sliding through silk.
“I object.”
Gasps cracked the room in two. Cameras flashed. Chairs scraped. The air thickened. And there she was—Selena Cross, my stepsister, rising with the elegance of someone who knew she would leave ruin in her wake. The smirk on her lips was the only announcement I needed: she had come to destroy me.
“Selena?” I whispered, voice trembling. “What are you doing?”
She walked slowly down the aisle, heels clicking like a countdown toward my doom. In her manicured hand, a folded document—the weight of it heavier than any weapon.
“Because, dear sister,” she said, her voice dripping sweet poison, “you’re already married.”
The music died. The crowd’s murmurs swelled, a tide of confusion and shock. Reed’s brow furrowed. I felt the ground shift beneath my feet, my life tilting on a sharp edge.
“What?” I breathed. “That’s impossible.”
Selena stopped right before me, lifting the paper like it were the crown jewel of her revenge.
“A legal marriage certificate. It says Elena Cross is already the lawful wife of Damien Voss.”
I stared at the name, blank. Damien Voss. Unfamiliar. And yet… my signature at the bottom twisted something in my chest. I had signed it? Impossible.
“That’s not possible,” I gasped. “I never married anyone. I don’t even know that man!”
Reed stepped forward, scanning the document. His jaw tightened, eyes darting between my face and the paper.
“But this is your signature, Elena,” he said slowly, almost painfully. “You signed it.”
“I didn’t—” My voice broke. “It must be fake.”
Before I could protest further, a sharp hand grabbed the certificate. My grandmother, Sephina Cross, glared down at me, her eyes narrow and merciless.
“Fake? You dare call a government document fake?”
“Grandma, please, you have to listen—”
Slap.
The sound rolled through the hall like thunder. My cheek burned, and I froze. The room went silent.
“You wretch,” Sephina hissed. “Just like your mother—filthy and deceitful. You should’ve stayed gone and spared us this disgrace.”
Every word landed like a dagger. I’d endured her cruelty before, but never like this, in front of everyone I thought I could trust.
“Mother, calm down,” Clara Smith, the family fake mediator, said softly, her tone smooth, controlled. “Let’s not make a scene before the press. Henry can check it—he’s a government officer. He’ll confirm whether it’s real.”
Her words sounded fair, reasonable even—but the glint in her eye told me otherwise. She wasn’t defending me. She was ensuring I could not escape public shame.
Henry Smith, stern and unsmiling, stepped forward. Adjusting his glasses, he examined the certificate. A hush fell. My hands trembled; I prayed, silently, that somehow this nightmare could vanish.
“This document is real,” Henry said flatly. “It’s an official record showing Elena Cross and Damien Voss as husband and wife.”
The words hit like a hammer.
“No… no, it can’t be,” I whispered. My knees felt weak. “Uncle Henry, please… check again.”
He shook his head, deliberate, unyielding.
“If you doubt it, go to the registry yourself. You’ll see the same result.”
A ripple of whispers ran through the crowd. Faces I had once trusted now turned away, some glancing at their phones, capturing the scandal. Even Reed’s hand twitched as he held mine, unsure, torn.
“You have to believe me,” I pleaded, voice breaking. “I swear I don’t know this man—”
Selena’s voice cut through me like ice.
“Stop pretending, Elena. How long will you insult everyone’s intelligence?”
“Stay out of this!” I shouted.
She laughed softly, turning her eyes to mine, glinting triumph.
“Your lies have stained this family’s name long enough. Reed deserves better. Our father is ashamed. And you—” she leaned close, whispering, “—you’ve always been the mistake.”
Then she straightened and addressed Reed.
“You never deserved this, Reed. You deserve honesty, not a woman who hides her sins.”
I saw something shift in Reed’s eyes—a storm of emotion. Shock, hurt, disbelief, and even love tangled together. He didn’t pull away from me. But I saw him falter, torn between the world and what he felt.
“I—” Reed started, his voice low, strained. “Elena… I… I don’t know what to believe. I… I need a moment.”
Selena froze, surprised by his hesitation. Her perfect control wavered for the briefest heartbeat.
“Reed, please,” I whispered, tears spilling. “You can’t—”
But he didn’t cling tight to me anyone or gave me the loving look he gave me earlier. He stayed rooted, his hand removed from mine , torn and probably disappointed but unwilling to abandon me entirely. “I… I need time,” he said, barely audible. “I need… to understand this. I think I need a break , Elena. This ....this marriage cannot hold again.”
The certificate slipped from my fingers, drifting to the marble floor. I stared down at it, the name Damien Voss etched in black ink, my name beside his.
I swore I saw a satisfactory smile plastered on the face of Selena and her mother
The room’s tension was unbearable. Whispered gasps, camera flashes, and chattering echoed like a cruel soundtrack.
Everything felt unreal. My wedding, my life, my family—everything shattered in a heartbeat.
I didn’t understand. I didn’t know who Damien Voss was. And worse, I didn’t remember ever knowing him. My mind swirled with gaps, confusion, and fear. I felt something I had never felt before: the weight of secrets I couldn’t even name pressing down on me.
And then, somewhere deep inside, a flicker of recognition—wrong, twisted, dangerous. Someone was orchestrating all this. Someone wanted this chaos. Someone was pulling strings in the shadows.
I picked up the certificate, trembling, clutching it to my chest like a lifeline. My lips quivered.
“I don’t know who Damien Voss is,” I whispered. “But I’ll find him. And when I do, I’ll prove all of you wrong.”
My grandmother’s laugh cut through the chaos, sharp and chilling.
“You’ll be searching graves, child. What if probably he's dead? What would you do?”
Laughter, whispers, and the heavy press of cameras filled the hall again. But I heard none of it. My heart thudded, raw and exposed.
My father’s silence felt worse than betrayal.
“Father,” I whispered. “Say something. Please.”
Jay Cross looked away.
“I’ll deal with you later.”
And just like that, I was nothing.
This was the day joy died. The day betrayal became tangible. The day the haunting began.