
The freezing water rushed up my nose before I even realized my husband had let go.
One second, I was leaning back into his arms for a romantic wedding photo by the venue’s massive indoor fountain, completely trusting him. The next second, I was plunging backward, the heavy fabric of my voluminous white dress instantly dragging me down.
I gasped, choking on the water, scrambling to break the surface. My carefully styled hair was plastered to my face, and I could feel my mascara running into my eyes. Panic gripped my chest. I was shivering, gasping for air, my hands trembling so hard I could barely wipe the water from my face.
I looked up, expecting to see Marcus in an absolute panic, reaching out to pull me to safety.
Instead, he was standing at the edge of the fountain, looking down at me. And he was laughing.
“What have you done?!” I screamed, my voice cracking with absolute devastation. Everything I had painstakingly planned—the thousands of dollars, the months of stress, my perfect dress—ruined in a fraction of a second.
“It was just a joke!” he snickered, not even offering me a hand. “It’s funny, right?”.
It wasn’t just him. The horrifying sound of our guests laughing echoed off the high ceilings of the gorgeous reception hall. I looked around and saw my new family pointing their phones at me, filming my absolute humiliation for entertainment. No one was coming to help me. No one cared that I was sobbing, freezing, and heartbroken in my own wedding gown.
My heart shattered right there in the water. The man I loved was gone.
Part 2:
The sound of their laughter felt like physical blows. It bounced off the high ceilings of the hall, mingling with the splash of the fountain water that was still settling around my waist. I stood there, paralyzed by the sheer magnitude of the humiliation. The water was freezing, seeping into the layers of tulle and silk, pulling me down with a literal and metaphorical weight that I couldn’t comprehend.
One second. Two seconds. It felt like an eternity passed while I stood in that water. My vision blurred with fresh tears. The overwhelming urge to curl into a ball, to sink beneath the surface and hide from the flashing camera lenses of our guests, washed over me. It seemed to everyone in the room that I was about to break down and cry even harder, or turn and run away in shame.
But as I stared up at Marcus, a profound shift happened inside me.
Through the blur of my ruined mascara, I saw his face. He wasn’t looking at me with love. He wasn’t looking at me like a partner. He was looking at me like I was the punchline to his pathetic, cruel joke. And he was basking in the attention of his friends and family, who had turned my pain into their evening entertainment.
The tears stopped. The trembling in my hands ceased. A cold, hard clarity snapped into place, freezing my veins. The bride who had spent months agonizing over fresh flowers, soft lighting, and this perfect venue—specifically chosen because of this very fountain—was gone.
Slowly, deliberately, I moved toward the edge of the stone fountain. My dress was incredibly heavy, fighting my every movement, but I pulled myself up. I didn’t take my eyes off Marcus. My face changed; the heartbreak evaporated, replaced by a gaze that was hard and completely cold.
The laughter began to die down slightly as the guests noticed my shift in demeanor. Marcus’s smile faltered for a fraction of a second as I stepped out, water cascading off my ruined dress onto the polished tile floor.
I walked right up to him. He opened his mouth, probably to tell me to lighten up, or to repeat that it was just a joke.
TXT
He never got the chance.
With one sharp, forceful movement, I shoved him.
I put every ounce of my betrayal, my wasted time, and my ruined dreams into my hands, and I pushed him straight backward into the water.
He didn’t even have time to understand what was happening. With a loud, undignified yell, his arms flailed in the air. A second later, he crashed backward into the fountain.
A massive wave of water splashed over the edge. Marcus surfaced, sputtering and coughing, completely soaked. His expensive, custom-tailored tuxedo immediately clung to his body, ruined by the chlorinated water. He wiped his face, his eyes wide with shock.
Instantly, dead silence fell over the massive hall.
No one was laughing anymore. The guests who had been howling a moment ago were suddenly frozen. The phones that had been shoved in my face were slowly lowered. The entire room was completely, utterly speechless.
I stood at the edge of the fountain, looking down at the man I had married just hours ago. I didn’t feel an ounce of pity for him as he shivered in the water.
I took a deep breath, my voice echoing loudly and clearly so that every single person who had just laughed at me could hear my final words to him.
“I’m filing for divorce,” I announced, my voice steady and unwavering.
Marcus just stared up at me, jaw slacked.
“Good thing you showed your true face on the very first day,” I continued, looking directly into his eyes, “and not after many years, when we would already have had children.”.
I turned away from him. The guests wouldn’t even meet my gaze; they looked down or turned their heads away in shame. The sickening laughter had completely disappeared.
I walked toward the exit, my wet dress leaving a heavy trail across the floor. Behind me, the only sound left breaking the heavy, suffocating silence of the hall was the gentle trickling of the water in the fountain.
THE END.