MY HUSBAND DIED ON OUR WEDDING DAY… BUT A WEEK LATER HE SAT NEXT TO ME AND WHISPERED, “DON’T SCREAM.”
I loved Adrian with everything I had. Four years together, and finally, our wedding day.
It was supposed to be perfect.
Instead, it ended with him collapsing in the reception hall.
By the time the ambulance arrived, it was already too late. A heart attack, they said. Sudden. Unavoidable.
I remember standing there in my dress, unable to breathe as they took him away.
Then came the funeral.
I arranged everything. My family came. Our friends came.
But his parents?
Never showed up.
Adrian always avoided talking about them. Said they had a falling out. Said it was better left alone.
Still… something felt wrong.
The only one from his side was a cousin, Victor. When I asked about Adrian’s parents, he hesitated, then muttered, “They’re wealthy. They don’t forgive mistakes like his.”
“What mistake?” I asked.
But he walked away.
That night, I couldn’t stay in our house. It felt empty. Heavy. Wrong.
So the next day, I packed a small bag and bought a bus ticket out of town.
I just needed to breathe.
The bus was quiet. I sat by the window, staring at nothing.
At the next stop, a man got on and took the seat beside me.
Then I smelled it.
That cologne.
My heart stopped.
He turned slightly—
And it was Adrian.
Alive.
Before I could scream, he leaned closer.
“Don’t,” he whispered. “Act normal.”
My hands started shaking. “What is this? You’re dead.”
He kept his eyes forward.
“No,” he said quietly. “I had to disappear.”
My chest tightened. “Why?”
There was a pause.
Then he said something that made my blood run cold—
“Because the people at your wedding… weren’t there to celebrate us.”
I froze, staring straight ahead like he told me to.
“What do you mean?” I whispered.
Adrian kept his voice low, calm, like we were talking about the weather. “My family didn’t cut me off because of some argument. I walked away from them.”
“Why?”
“Because of what they do.”
My chest tightened.
“They’re not just wealthy,” he continued. “They control things. Deals, people… outcomes. And when I refused to be part of it, I became a liability.”
I shook my head slightly. “So they… what? Killed you?”
“No,” he said. “They tried to control me. The wedding was their last move.”
My stomach dropped.
“The paramedic,” he added quietly, “wasn’t random. Neither was the diagnosis. I took something before the ceremony—a compound that slows the body enough to fake cardiac arrest.”
I turned toward him, barely breathing. “You planned your own death?”
“I had to disappear in front of them,” he said. “That was the only way they’d stop watching me… and stop watching you.”
My mind raced. “Then why come back?”
“Because you’re not safe yet.”
A chill ran down my spine.
He finally glanced at me, just for a second.
“They were at the funeral,” he said. “Not my parents. Their people.”
I felt sick.
“They’re waiting,” he continued, “to see what you do next. Who you talk to. Where you go.”
My hands clenched in my lap.
“So what happens now?” I whispered.
The bus slowed as it approached the next stop.
Adrian stood up.
“You get off here,” he said. “There’s a car waiting.”
“For who?”
“For us.”
My heart pounded.
“After this,” he added quietly, “you don’t go back to your old life. You don’t use your name. You don’t contact anyone.”
The doors hissed open.
I looked up at him, my entire world unraveling.
“Adrian… if we do this—there’s no coming back, is there?”
He held my gaze.
“No,” he said.
Then he held out his hand.
And in that moment—
I had to decide whether to follow a dead man…
Or stay behind and risk becoming one.