She Got the Marriage License and I Got 99 Broken Promises Chapter 10
Just as the officiant was about to pronounce us husband and wife, the chapel doors flew open.Â
Nolan stumbled into the aisle, his voice a jagged, desperate rasp. “Stop! She’s mine. Tessa belongsÂ
with me.”Â
He was soaked through, rainwater dripping fromÂ
his clothes.Â
Damp strands of hair hung over his eyes.Â
His face was hollow, his eyes bloodshot, and heÂ
looked worn down to the bone.Â
There was nothing left of the polished,Â
unstoppable man he used to be.Â
He stared at me desperately, then fumbled out aÂ
velvet box with shaking hands.Â
It was the same diamond ring I had refusedÂ
before.Â
Hope burned in his eyes. “Tessa, I’m here to keepÂ
my promise.”Â
It was still the same ring, but time had dulled it.Â
A thin layer of dust coated the velvet, a testamentÂ
to how long he’d been holding onto a dead dream.Â
“Tessa, I’m sorry. I know I came too late, butÂ
please, just give me one more chance. I have nothing now. You’re all I have left.”Â
“Sabrina lied to me. The baby was never mine. I’m sorry, Tessa. Please forgive me.”Â
I pressed my lips together, then snapped the ring box shut.Â
“Mr. Hayes,” I said evenly, “unless I misplaced the facts, you already have a wife. You signed those papers with Sabrina.” You got the marriage certificate with her.”Â
He choked on the words he wanted to say and dropped his eyes, too guilty to meet mine. He swallowed hard, clearly trying to explain, but I cut him off before he could speak.Â
“I already know what you’re going to say.”Â
I looked at him calmly.Â
“No, Nolan. I don’t want this. Every time you chose Sabrina over me, every time you left me behind forÂ
her, whatever I felt for you wore away piece byÂ
piece. By the time I walked away, there wasÂ
nothing left.”Â
I paused, then said the truth as plainly as I could.Â
“I don’t hate you anymore. But I don’t love youÂ
either.”Â
He froze there, stunned into silence.Â
For a second, the broken man standing in front ofÂ
me overlapped with the boy I’d fallen for a lifetimeÂ
ago. The one who lived in a basement studio andÂ
promised me the world while sharing a $1.00 barÂ
of soap.Â
Back then, his eyes had held light.Â
And me.Â
Now they held nothing but regret and exhaustion.Â
Miles stepped forward and pulled me into histÂ
arms, protective and steady.Â
He gave Nolan a slow appraising look, then let outÂ
a short, humorless laugh.Â
“You still don’t get it, do you? A woman who hadÂ
the courage to struggle through seven hard years.Â
with you was never the kind of woman who’d look.Â
behind her once she crossed the finish line.”Â
“Just because you decided to check the rearview mirror doesn’t mean the road stayed empty.”Â
After the wedding, Nolan finally accepted that IÂ
was never coming back.Â
He disappeared from my life completely.Â
I never saw him again.Â
Life was full of choices, and every choice came with consequences.Â
I chose Miles.Â
The only thing I regretted now was teasing him. too much that morning just because I felt playful.Â
I ended up so thoroughly exhausted I spent the rest of the day in bed.Â
Which only proved one thing.Â
The first time, he’d been holding back.

