Her fiancé stayed by her side through cake tastings, dress fittings, and nearly a full year of wedding planning—until the day doctors told them her illness was incurable. Then he left. What the deeply hurt bride did next stunned everyone.
“I can’t do this.” At first, I thought Lukas was talking about the diagnosis. The cancer. The frightening prognoses. The cold, cautious words doctors use when trying to soften the blow of devastating news. I was twenty-nine, sitting at our kitchen table in one of his old sweatshirts, still struggling to wrap my mind around the words “advanced” and “incurable.” My tea had gone cold. My head had been spinning ever since the doctor’s appointment.
Lukas stood in the doorway, a travel bag in his hand. For a moment, I stared at the bag, telling myself there had to be another explanation. Maybe he just needed some space. Maybe he was staying the night at his brother’s place.
Then he repeated himself. “I can’t do this, Sarah.” In that moment, I understood. He wasn’t talking about the diagnosis. He was talking about me. “You promised we’d get through everything together,” I whispered. He looked full of shame and fear, but that didn’t make the pain any easier to bear. “I know,” he said quietly. “So that’s it?” I asked. “You’re leaving before I get even sicker? Before the treatment changes me? Before I no longer look like the woman who was convenient for you to love?” He flinched. “Please, stop.” I let out a bitter laugh. “Stop what? Telling the truth?” A few minutes later, he grabbed his bag and walked out. He left me alone while my future crumbled around me. The wedding was in twelve days. Everything was already paid for. My father had covered the venue, the flowers, the dress, the catering, the music, and the hotel rooms. My mother was still debating the decorations. My father had practiced his speech so many times he practically knew it by heart. For three days, I barely left my bed. On the fourth night, I stood in front of my wedding dress and had a thought so absurd that I actually laughed out loud. Then I thought about it again. The wedding didn’t have to be called off. I just needed a different groom. Maybe that sounds crazy. Maybe it was. But when you find out your time is limited, shame loses much of its power. I had dreamed of a wedding my whole life. The dress. The flowers. The music. My father walking me down the aisle. My mother crying in the front row. I wasn’t ready to give up that dream just because the man who had promised it to me was weaker than I’d thought. The next morning, I looked up acting agencies. Finally, I found an agency that also arranged unusual bookings for events. I chose the most affordable man who was still available for my wedding date. His name was Peter. His photo showed kind eyes and a pleasant smile. I sent him the most uncomfortable email of my life and explained everything. The diagnosis. The cancelled wedding. The fact that I was looking for neither romance nor deception. I simply wanted someone willing to stand at the end of the aisle so my family wouldn’t have to watch me lose yet another thing.



















































