Rejected Bride: Now I Rule Your Family

Rejected Bride: Now I Rule Your Family

Catherine

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I stood at the altar in my wedding gown when my assistant handed me the phone. My fiancé, Devin, the heir to New York's most powerful mafia family, had just eloped with a waitress. He didn't just leave me; he broadcasted a photo of them kissing at the airport to the entire high society. A thousand guests whispered like a virus. Flashbulbs went off like gunfire. My father panicked, begging me to flee through the side door in shame. In the back room, the House family matriarch treated me like garbage, tossing her lesser, resentful grandsons at me to clean up the mess. "Choose one of them, or scurry away," her daughter-in-law sneered. If I compromised, I would be a permanent joke, a powerless hand-me-down bride for Devin to mock from his European paradise. I had played the perfect, obedient fiancée for years, only to be publicly executed like a fool. But I didn't shed a single tear. The humiliation froze into a sharp, calculated desire for vengeance. I refused to be their victim. I wanted to make Devin bow to me for the rest of his life. Lifting my heavy skirt, I walked straight to the center of the room, locking eyes with the terrifying man in the shadows. "Since the heir ran away, the compensation must be of equal value," I declared. I pointed past the furious matriarch, aiming directly at Devin's adoptive father-the ruthless, absolute Don of the House family, Brent House. "I choose him."

Rejected Bride: Now I Rule Your Family Chapter 1

Beatrice Cline POV:

The organ music sputtered and died.

A thick, suffocating silence fell over St. Patrick's Cathedral. It was broken only by the rustle of a thousand silk dresses and the frantic, muffled whispers.

Today was meant to be my wedding day. But Devin House, the man who was to stand before me and exchange vows and rings, wasn't even here.

I kept my back straight. My spine felt like a rod of ice.

The weight of the Vera Wang gown was immense, a cascade of frozen silk and lace that pooled around my feet. My only anchor in the swirling sea of humiliation was the bouquet of white peonies in my hands. I was gripping the stems so hard my knuckles were bloodless. Any second now, I was sure the stems would snap.

"He's gone, Bea."

My father, Arthur Cline's voice was a ragged whisper beside me, reeking of panic and expensive cologne. His face, usually ruddy and self-satisfied, was the color of ash.

"Devin's gone."

I didn't look at him. My gaze was fixed over his shoulder, across the sea of gawking faces, to the front pew reserved for the House family. Eleanor House, the matriarch, sat ramrod straight. Her brows furrowed, a wordless betrayal of her fury. She looked like a queen whose castle was burning down around her.

Then, Elara was at my side, my loyal assistant, her movements quick and silent. She held her phone low, angled so only I could see.

The screen showed a picture. My fiancé's arm was wrapped around a woman, his mouth crushed against hers in a triumphant kiss. Behind them, the departures board for JFK was clear: a flight to Rome.

"It's Isolde Dodson," Elara breathed, her words a staccato burst of information right next to my ear. "They eloped."

Isolde Dodson. A waitress Devin had been seeing. I knew he was cheating on me, but I never imagined he'd be dumb enough to run off.

I closed my eyes. Just for a second. One single, solitary second to absorb the full, exquisite scope of this public execution. He hadn't just left me. He had broadcasted it to the entire New York high society, to the press, to the rival families. He had made me a fool.

When I opened my eyes again, there were no tears. I turned and handed the bouquet to Elara. She stared at me, her eyes wide with confusion.

My father was already tugging at my arm. "Let's go, Bea. We'll leave through the side. We'll issue a statement..."

I pulled my arm away from his grasp.

Lifting the heavy skirt of my gown, I took a step. Not back down the aisle, but forward. Toward the lectern next to the priest.

A collective gasp sucked the air from the cathedral. Every phone, every camera, every pair of eyes swiveled to follow me.

I reached the marble lectern and stood behind the microphone. My heartbeat was like frantic drumming. I let my gaze sweep across the audience, pausing for a fraction of a second on the flashing lenses of the reporters in the side aisles. I was giving them the shot of a lifetime.

I cleared my throat. The small sound echoed in the cavernous space.

"Thank you all for coming today," I said. My voice was clear, steady. It didn't tremble. I didn't know it was possible to feel so broken inside and sound so whole. "To witness the birth... of a coward."

The explosion was instantaneous. Flashbulbs went off like a volley of gunfire. The whispers erupted into a roar.

I let them have their moment, then continued, my voice cutting through the noise.

"Devin House, the designated heir of the House family, chose today to abandon his vow, his family's honor, and my trust. He has proven, with his actions, that he is unfit to bear any responsibility-not for a wife, and not for a family."

Each word was a precisely aimed bullet. I wasn't just talking about our marriage. I was attacking the very foundation of his future, his claim as the next Don. I was gutting his reputation on the world's stage.

Out of the corner of my eye, I saw Eleanor House's face tighten, the skin stretched taut over her cheekbones. And beside her, a man who had been sitting in the shadows shifted.

For the first time, the Don himself, Brent House, lifted his head. His gaze, the color of storm clouds, rose from the floor and locked onto me.

Our eyes met across the expanse of the church.

A physical pressure, immense and crushing, slammed into me. It was like standing too close to a furnace. My heart stuttered, a violent lurch in my chest. But I didn't look away. I couldn't. To look away now was to surrender.

I forced my attention back to the microphone, back to the hundreds of faces hanging on my every word.

"Today, I, Beatrice Cline, have been publicly humiliated by the House family."

I paused, letting the weight of that accusation settle. Letting them understand that this was no longer about a jilted bride. This was about a debt of honor.

"According to the original marriage agreement between our families, this union must be completed to maintain the stability of our alliance."

Another pause. My father was shaking his head, his mouth agape in horror. He thought I was digging my own grave. He didn't understand. I was already buried. This was me, clawing my way out.

"Since the groom has run away..."

I let the sentence hang in the air, a perfect, terrible silence.

"...then, for the sake of both families' honor, I demand that the House family provide a new groom. Today. Right here."

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“I stood at the altar in my wedding gown when my assistant handed me the phone. My fiancé, Devin, the heir to New York's most powerful mafia family, had just eloped with a waitress. He didn't just leave me; he broadcasted a photo of them kissing at the airport to the entire high society. A thousand guests whispered like a virus. Flashbulbs went off like gunfire. My father panicked, begging me to flee through the side door in shame. In the back room, the House family matriarch treated me like garbage, tossing her lesser, resentful grandsons at me to clean up the mess. "Choose one of them, or scurry away," her daughter-in-law sneered. If I compromised, I would be a permanent joke, a powerless hand-me-down bride for Devin to mock from his European paradise. I had played the perfect, obedient fiancée for years, only to be publicly executed like a fool. But I didn't shed a single tear. The humiliation froze into a sharp, calculated desire for vengeance. I refused to be their victim. I wanted to make Devin bow to me for the rest of his life. Lifting my heavy skirt, I walked straight to the center of the room, locking eyes with the terrifying man in the shadows. "Since the heir ran away, the compensation must be of equal value," I declared. I pointed past the furious matriarch, aiming directly at Devin's adoptive father-the ruthless, absolute Don of the House family, Brent House. "I choose him."”
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Chapter 1

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Chapter 2

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Chapter 3

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Chapter 4

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Chapter 5

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Chapter 6

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Chapter 7

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Chapter 8

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Chapter 9

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Chapter 10

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