My dad never liked my fiancé, Jake.
“I’m not coming to this wedding,” he said.
I was devastated, but I didn’t push.
Jake had always rubbed Dad the wrong way. Maybe it was Jake’s confidence—or as Dad put it, “cockiness.” Maybe it was how quickly things moved between us. We’d only been dating for a year before we got engaged. But when you know, you know, right?
Jake made me laugh. He listened to me. He had a decent job in tech, and he treated me like I was the only person in the world. So when Dad refused to give us his blessing, I chalked it up to overprotectiveness.
Mom tried to mediate, but Dad was stubborn. He stopped showing up for family dinners when Jake was there. Holidays became awkward. Eventually, I stopped talking to Dad as much. It hurt, but I chose my future.
Fast-forward to the wedding day.
Everything was ready. The venue was beautiful—small garden, white roses everywhere, with fairy lights woven through the trees. I was in my dress, heart racing, bridesmaids around me fixing my hair, my veil, my lipstick.
And then someone called out, “Your dad’s here!”
I froze.
I turned and saw him rushing in, eyes darting around. He looked pale, like he hadn’t slept in days. His hair was messy, shirt half untucked.
“Dad?” I said, stepping away from the mirror.
He grabbed my hand and pulled me aside. His eyes were wild.
“Jake is—” he started, voice trembling.
My heart stopped.
“Jake is not who he says he is,” Dad whispered.
“What are you talking about?” I asked.
“There’s something you don’t know. I wasn’t going to come. I wanted to stay away. But this—this I couldn’t let happen.”
I felt my legs wobble a bit. My dad wasn’t dramatic. He didn’t pull stunts. If he was saying this now, something had to be seriously wrong.
“I did a background check,” he continued, quietly. “I know you think I’m controlling, but I had a gut feeling. Jake’s been using a fake last name. That’s not even his real identity.”
I blinked. “What?”
Dad handed me his phone. There was an article pulled up. A photo of Jake—or someone who looked exactly like him. The name under it was different. But the story was clear.
The man had been investigated five years ago for financial fraud. Moved from state to state. New names. Quick jobs. Fast relationships. Then he disappeared.
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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