The Wrong Bride: Chapter 10
The Wrong Bride: Ares and Raven’s Story
My heart aches as I take my sisterâs wedding dress off the hanger. Itâs beautiful, and itâs going to look amazing on her. Every second of designing and sewing this was torture. It was a reminder that my unrequited love ends here. Thankfully, Ares doesnât seem to have told Hannah about what I did, and he hasnât given it much thought either. I thought Iâd destroyed our friendship, but instead, heâs just been texting me a lot more. He seems worried, and itâs ridiculous, because heâs the source of my agony.
The tips of my fingers brush over the contours of Hannahâs dress, my heart hollow. I designed a mermaid dress for her with a separate train that fastens around the waist, essentially giving Hannah two dresses in one. I can already imagine the way Ares will react when he sees her walk down the aisle in this. He wonât be able to take his eyes off her, and Iâll have to stand there as he looks at her the way Iâve always wanted him to look at me.
âRaven!â
I turn toward the door at the sound of my sisterâs voice and force a smile onto my face. âReady for your last dress fitting?â
She nods, her eyes roaming over the dress in delight. âItâs beautiful. Is there anything you canât do?â
I smile at her through the pain. âLetâs see if it fits or not. I can make some final adjustments the night before the wedding to ensure it fits perfectly, but I doubt your weight will fluctuate much in the next two weeks.â
She nods and takes the dress from me, disappearing into a fitting room where two attendants are waiting for her. I wonder if Iâll ever find myself trying on the dress of my dreams. I canât imagine finding someone Iâd actually want to marry.
Hannah emerges looking like the superstar she is, and this time my smile turns genuine. She looks beautiful, and seeing her wearing one of my grandest designs is surreal.
âWow,â I whisper.
Hannah chuckles and turns around for me. âItâs perfect, Rave. I love it.â
She looks into the mirror and assesses the dress carefully. âDid you decide if youâre bringing a date to the wedding? Donât forget the NDA. No one can know what event theyâre actually attending until the day of our wedding, or weâll have the paparazzi swarming us.â
âI know,â I remind her. âDonât worry. Iâm not bringing a date. Your wedding day is all about you, and I want to be there for you. I canât do that if I have to entertain a date. Besides, Iâm not seeing anyone.â
Because of Hannahâs popularity, her wedding has been kept under wraps. Not even her closest friends will be told that the party theyâre invited to is her wedding. Chances of the news leaking are too high, and no amount of security could keep the press away if they caught wind of a wedding between the CEO of one of the largest media companies and a famous actress.
âI suppose itâs good that you arenât dating anyone,â she says absentmindedly. âYouâre lucky in that sense, I guess. Enjoy being single for as long as you can. I didnât have that luxury for very long.â
Luxury. I smile mockingly, my spine straightening. Iâd do anything to trade places with her. âIs everything okay?â I ask, forcing myself to remain kind and calm. These days, the bitterness runs so deep that I can taste it on my tongue, but I canât let it show.
âI donât know,â she says, her voice soft. âAres and I are always fighting these days. Weâre barely even friends anymore, and itâs just insane that weâre getting married. Sometimes I wonder if it wouldâve been different if Ares hadnât been my first boyfriend. Iâd never been in a serious relationship before him, and because of that, weâve always felt like a work-in-progress. Sometimes I wonder what it would be like if weâd met once Iâd already been in a few relationships. If weâd learned our lessons before we got together, would everything have felt a little easier?â
I blink in surprise, unsure what to say. Ares and Hannah always seemed like the perfect couple to me. I never realized they had any issues at all, but I suppose it makes sense that they do.
âThereâs a certain beauty in growing together, Han. Knowing that everything you two have accomplished, you did together⦠that is admirable and enviable. Maybe things could have been different, but they arenât, and you two have made the best of the cards you were dealt.â
She nods and looks at me, vulnerability in her expression. âMaybe, Rave. Iâm not sure, you know? Itâs just been so hard. The Windsors have so many rules when it comes to our marriage. Did you know Ares and I arenât allowed to stay away from each other for more than three consecutive nights during the entire first three years of our marriage? Itâs insane, but if we breach their terms, Ares loses his inheritance. Theyâre just so different from us. When I was younger, I thought it was amazing. It made me feel like I was marrying into royalty, but now? Now itâs constricting and putting so much strain on my relationship with Ares and my career. I canât just take a break from filming for an entire year, and Ares canât always accompany me on set. How are we supposed to abide by the three-night-rule?â She runs a hand through her hair and sighs. âI suppose itâs hard for you to understand. Itâs so unfortunate that you didnât have the talent to become an actress.â She pauses. âBut then again, itâs a blessing too. Your life is so⦠nice. You have your modeling work and the prestige that comes from that, but you have enough time left to run your own company. My career is far too demanding for something like that. I havenât even been able to help Mom out with Dreamessence, you know? Iâm supposed to manage it with Ares after the merger, but where am I going to find the time?â
I stare at my sister as my heart takes a beating. Not enough talent⦠she knows that isnât true. I quit acting early on when she became anxious about having to compete against me. She begged me to reconsider, telling me that sheâd hate fighting over roles, and that acting was very much her thing, so I gave in. It was never a matter of talent. Not at the start.
âIâm sure the three-day thing is negotiable, Han,â I say eventually, exhausted. I donât have it in me to stand up for myself today. âJust talk to Grandma Anne.â
She throws her hands up and sighs. âDonât you think I havenât tried? She wonât budge on it. Grandma doesnât want me to work at all. The closer we get to the wedding, the more Iâm second-guessing this.â
I inhale deeply and force myself to look my sister in the eye. âYou love Ares, donât you?â
She nods. âWith all my heart.â
âThen youâll be okay, Han. I know that being with him requires sacrifices on your part, and Iâm sure itâs the same for him, too. For years now, he hasnât been able to date you publicly because of your career. That canât have been easy on him either, you know? There must have been so many things heâs wanted to do with you and couldnât. Now itâs your turn to make some sacrifices. Thatâs what marriage is supposed to be, right? Compromise.â
She nods and turns back toward the mirror, her eyes roaming over her dress. âYes, I guess so. I guess the worst part is that Ares is so perfect. All of our issues stem from me. I know he deserves everything, but Iâm still having a hard time pushing aside my ego and my aspirations. One year is enough for people to forget about me, you know? Imagine three years.â
I chuckle and shake my head. âYouâre Hannah Du Pont. Thereâs no way anyone will ever forget about you, Han. You could take a ten-year hiatus and it still wouldnât matter.â
She smiles at me then. âThank you, Rave,â she says, her voice soft. âI needed this. I needed to talk to someone who wonât judge me for my selfishness, for the thoughts that I shouldnât be voicing at all.â
I shake my head and smile back at her. âYouâll be okay, sis. In two weeks, youâre going to be the most beautiful bride anyone has ever seen, and soon all of your doubts will seem like a distant memory.â
She nods, a hint of insecurity in her eyes. âYouâll be by my side, wonât you?â
âAlways,â I promise. Iâll always be there for her, even if doing so rips my hearts to shreds over and over again.