The day my fiancé left me, there were still wedding invitations sitting on our kitchen counter.
Cream-colored cardstock.
Gold lettering.
My name beside his.
The life we’d spent nearly a year planning together.
Three days earlier, we’d been discussing flower arrangements and arguing over whether his cousins should be allowed to bring extra guests.
Three days earlier, I thought I was the luckiest woman alive.
Then everything changed.
It started in a cold hospital office that smelled faintly of disinfectant and stale coffee.
I sat beside my fiancé, Ryan, while a specialist reviewed test results.
My palms were sweating.
Ryan kept reassuring me that everything would be okay.
That whatever it was, we’d handle it together.
Then the doctor said a word that seemed to stop time itself.
“Terminal.”
The room went silent.
I remember staring at the doctor’s lips, certain I had misunderstood.
Terminal.
The word echoed endlessly inside my head.
I was twenty-nine years old.
People my age weren’t supposed to hear words like that.
People my age were supposed to be planning honeymoons.
Not preparing for death.
Ryan squeezed my hand.
Or at least I thought he did.
The rest of the appointment passed in a blur of medical terminology, treatment options, and statistics.
I barely heard any of it.
All I knew was that my future had suddenly become frighteningly uncertain.
For illustrative purposes only
When we got home, Ryan was unusually quiet.
I assumed he was grieving too.
I assumed we were processing the news together.
I was wrong.
Two days later, I walked into the kitchen and found a suitcase beside the door.
Ryan stood there with red eyes.
His jacket was already on.
His car keys were in his hand.
For a moment, I thought he was leaving for work.
Then I noticed the suitcase.
My stomach dropped.
“Ryan?”
He couldn’t meet my eyes.
“I’m sorry.”
The words barely rose above a whisper.
I felt cold.
“What are you talking about?”
He swallowed.
“I can’t do this.”
At first, I thought he meant the diagnosis.
The treatments.
The uncertainty.
I stepped closer.
“We’ll figure it out.”
He shook his head.
Tears appeared in his eyes.
Then came the sentence that shattered everything.
“I don’t think I’m strong enough for what’s coming.”
I stared at him.
Unable to breathe.
Unable to understand.
Slowly, the truth settled over me.
He wasn’t talking about the illness.
He was talking about me.
The woman he was supposed to marry.
The woman he’d promised to love.
The woman he was abandoning.
Before the sickness became visible.
Before the hospital visits multiplied.
Before loving me became inconvenient.
He left twenty minutes later.
Just like that.
After six years together.
After twelve months of wedding planning.
After promising forever.
The front door closed behind him.
And suddenly I was alone.
For weeks I barely left my bedroom.
The wedding venue was fully paid.
The caterer had already received deposits.
My wedding dress hung in the closet.
My parents had spent tens of thousands of dollars.
Friends and relatives had purchased plane tickets.
Everything was ready.
Everything except the groom.
I cried until I thought there were no tears left.
Then I cried some more.
My mother tried comforting me.
My father tried distracting me.
Nothing worked.
Every dream I’d ever had seemed to be disappearing at once.
One night, around two in the morning, I sat alone in bed staring at the ceiling.
The wedding date was six weeks away.
The cancellation fees would be enormous.
But that wasn’t what hurt.
What hurt was knowing that I’d never get the wedding I’d dreamed about since childhood.
The white dress.
The walk down the aisle.
The celebration.
The moment everyone gathers to witness the beginning of a new chapter.
And then an absolutely ridiculous idea entered my mind.
The wedding didn’t have to be canceled.
I just needed another groom.
The thought was so absurd that I actually laughed.
Then I stopped laughing.
Because the more I thought about it, the more possible it seemed.
I opened my laptop.
An hour later I was browsing local acting agencies.
If people hired actors for commercials, parties, and corporate events…
Why couldn’t I hire one for a wedding?
It was embarrassing.
Desperate.
Probably insane.
But I had nothing left to lose.
After scrolling through dozens of profiles, I found one that fit my budget.
Daniel Hart.
Thirty-three.
Stage actor.
Local commercials.
Professional event performer.
Available on my wedding date.
I sent him a long email explaining everything.
My diagnosis.
My fiancé leaving.
The wedding.
The guests.
The dress.
The fact that I simply wanted one beautiful day before life became too difficult.
Then I hit send.
I expected nothing.
Instead, the next morning I received a reply.
Three sentences.
“I’ll do it.”
“But only under one condition.”
“You must tell me exactly what the doctors said.”
I stared at the screen.
Confused.
Why would an actor care about my medical records?
Still, curiosity won.
I sent him everything.
Every report.
Every scan.
Every prognosis.
Every terrifying document.
Two days later, Daniel asked to meet.
For illustrative purposes only
The first thing I noticed about Daniel was that he didn’t seem like an actor.
He wasn’t flashy.
He wasn’t arrogant.
He wasn’t trying to impress anyone.
Instead, he looked thoughtful.
Almost serious.
After we exchanged greetings, he opened a folder and slid it across the table.
I looked inside.
Medical studies.
Research papers.
Clinical trial information.
Specialist contacts.
“What is this?” I asked.
Daniel folded his hands.
“A reason not to give up.”
I frowned.
“What?”
He took a deep breath.
“My ex-wife had the same diagnosis.”
My heart skipped.
“What happened?”
A small smile appeared on his face.
“She’s alive.”
I blinked.
“Alive?”
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