While toasting and cutting the wedding cake at their reception, Sylvie and Rob bask in the beauty of their day. Until the wedding cake reveals something strange inside. Only for Diane, Rob’s mother, to stand up and reveal more secrets…
I’ve gone from blushing bride to being absolutely crushed by my husband, Rob. It was supposed to be the happiest day of my life. But it turned into a nightmare that I’m still reeling from.
I thought I knew everything about Rob, the man I was going to marry. But now, I realize that I didn’t know him at all.
Rob and I had been together for three years. And during that time, he had been perfect. He was successful, charming, and always making me feel like I was his entire world. When he proposed, I thought that all the puzzle pieces were falling into place.
“It’s finally happening,” I told my mother as I sat across from her in the kitchen.
“I know, my darling,” she said, pushing a plate of scones toward me. “It’s your moment. It’s the beginning of your new chapter.”
I slid into wedding planning with ease; it was stressful, I won’t lie. But the excitement carried me through. I couldn’t wait to marry the man I loved in the dream wedding that I had created for us.
The day started out exactly as I imagined it. I had my hair and makeup done at the hotel we were getting married. And Rob was in the room next door with his groomsmen.
We had our bridal photoshoot before the ceremony, and then it was time to make our relationship official to God and the law. The ceremony was beautiful, Rob was his usual smooth-talking, charming self, and everyone was having the best time.
I was floating. I don’t know if it was the live band or the fairy lights, but everything was beyond my wildest dreams. My heart was full of love and happiness, and I remember looking at Rob and thinking that I was the luckiest woman in the world.
After dinner, it was time for toasts and cutting the cake.
It was a stunning cake. Three tiers of white French vanilla frosting, delicate roses, and silver details adorned the cake, and honestly, it looked like a work of art. Rob and I stood together, ready to cut the first slice while everyone watched. I was glowing with happiness, my wedding ring glittering in the light.
But as the knife went in, something felt wrong. The cake didn’t slice smoothly as any cake would have. Instead, the knife met some resistance, as though there was something solid at first. I laughed it off, figuring that maybe we had hit one of the columns holding the cake together.
But when we pulled out the slice of cake, ready to slide it onto the white plate, my breath caught in my throat.
The inside of the cake was black.
It wasn’t a deep chocolate or even charcoal, which was a craze. No, it was pitch-black and like sludge, or ink. It was… disgusting.
The whispers started immediately, and I could feel eyes burning into us. I turned to Rob, expecting him to explain, but he looked just as stunned as I was.
That’s when I saw it. Something small poking out from the cake. I reached into the cake, my fingers covered in frosting, and pulled out a little figure.
It was a plastic baby.
I stared at it, the blood draining from my face. I wasn’t pregnant, so there was no way that this was someone’s horrible way of revealing that. I couldn’t understand what was happening.
What twisted joke was this? I scanned the room, waiting for someone to explain, for Rob to laugh and say that it was a prank. But no one moved. No one spoke.
Suddenly, Rob’s mother, Diane, stood up from her seat at our parents’ table. Her face was cold and unreadable, and when she spoke, her voice sliced through the murmurs.
“Everyone,” she began, her tone sharp. “I need to say something!”
All the whispers stopped. My heart pounded in my chest. Diane had always been kind to me, maybe a little distant, but I never expected her to stand up in the middle of my wedding reception like this.
Rob’s eyes were glued to the floor, his hands gripping the edge of the table.
“I’ve been keeping a secret,” Diane continued, her gaze fixed on Rob. “It’s a secret that I can’t keep any longer.”
The knot in my stomach tightened. I could feel something dark, something awful, bubbling up just beneath the surface. Rob didn’t move at all.
“I contacted the bakery a few weeks ago,” Diane said. “I asked her to make the cake this way for a reason.”
“What? Why?” I asked.
“The black cake,” she continued, “is a symbol. A symbol of the secrets that my son, Rob, has been hiding. Secrets that you, and everyone else here, deserve to know.”
I turned to my husband, who was still looking down.
“What is she talking about?” I asked.
He didn’t answer. He barely blinked.
“Rob, you need to tell Sylvie the truth,” she said. “You need to tell her everything. Tell her everything right now in front of us all.”
Rob’s silence was suffocating.
Diane didn’t wait for an answer.
“I’m sorry, Sylvie,” she said. “But Rob has been with other women. Many other women.”
Her words hung heavy in the air, and I felt the floor fall out from under me.
No.
No, this couldn’t be true. Rob loved me. We had just gotten married about two hours ago. How could he do this? How could he lie to me?
“And it gets worse,” Diane said, her voice colder now. “He’s gotten several of them pregnant. There’s three kids already, and one on the way. Candace is pregnant, isn’t she, Rob?”
“What?” I gasped.
Diane’s words hit me like a sledgehammer, and my knees nearly buckled. Pregnant? I could barely breathe. The whispers around me grew louder, but I couldn’t focus on anything except Rob’s face. His eyes stayed glued to the ground, like he was too ashamed to even look at me.
The plastic baby slipped from my fingers, bouncing off the table with a soft clink.
Diane didn’t stop there.
“Sylvie, he has fathered children,” she repeated. “And he has abandoned them all.”
My tears finally took over. This couldn’t be real. I had spent the last three years building a life with this man. We had talked about our future, about having kids of our own one day. And now, here I was, at my wedding reception, finding out that he already had children.
“Is this true?” I asked, my voice reaching a pitch I didn’t know was possible. “Rob, is this true?”
For the longest time, he didn’t answer. When he finally spoke, his voice was barely a whisper.
“Yes,” he said. “It’s true, Sylvie.”
That’s all it took to completely shatter everything.
“I’m so sorry,” Diane said, looking at me with something that resembled pity. “I’m sorry, darling. I couldn’t let you marry him without knowing. You deserve better than this.”
“But you did let me marry him!” I shrieked. “Why did you wait until now? He could have told me this before! Now we have to get our marriage annulled. We’ve been married for a few hours, and it’s been a lie.”
Diane looked at me like I had slapped her in the face. But it was true. If she didn’t want me to marry her son, she should have spoken up sooner. Not after the thousands of dollars had been spent, and not after our marriage had been made legal.
I wanted to scream, to throw the cake across the room, anything to make my heart stop hurting. But I couldn’t. I could only stand there, frozen, as the betrayal washed over me in waves.
Rob took a step toward me, his eyes pleading.
“Babe, let me explain. Please…”
“No, don’t you dare speak to me!” I shouted at him.
The words tasted bitter on my tongue. I had never spoken to Rob like this before. I had never been upset with Rob like this before. I wanted to hurt him as much as he’d hurt me, but I knew that nothing I said would make him feel what I was feeling.
With shaky hands, I wiped the tears from my face.
Everything was over. I turned on my heel and ran away from the wedding. I didn’t know where I was going, I just needed to get away.
Moments later, my father’s car pulled up at the end of the hotel driveway.
“Get in, my darling,” he said. “Let’s get you out of here.”
What would you have done?
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