

The Canceled Wedding and The Mafia Bride’s Regret
My fiancée, Diana, is the princess of a powerful New York Mafia family. She
claims to love me deeply, yet a month before our wedding, she told me she wanted
to have a baby with her childhood sweetheart, claiming it was a "family arrangement."
I refused. But she brought it up every single day, pushing me into a corner as
if my consent didn’t matter.
Two weeks before the wedding, I received a pregnancy report from a private
clinic.
That’s when I found out she was already nearly a month pregnant.
She never intended to wait for my permission.
In that moment, I finally woke up. Our years of history were nothing but a
fragile illusion.
So, I canceled the wedding. I burned every single gift she had ever given me.
On the day we were supposed to say "I do," I boarded a flight to Italy to pursue
my advanced degree in clinical medicine. I officially accepted a mission with
Doctors Without Borders and cut all ties with the Mafia family.
From that day on, Diana and I were finished. For good.
One month before the wedding, my fiancée, Diana, insisted on having a child with
her childhood sweetheart.
I didn't agree. But she kept bringing it up, day after day, cornering me like
she was negotiating a business deal that had to close.
Then, two weeks before the big day, I received an anonymous package.
It was a pregnancy report from a private clinic on the Upper East Side.
It stated clearly: Diana. Five weeks and three days pregnant.
In that instant, I realized she had never cared what I thought. She had already
made her choice; she was just "notifying" me, her official fiancé.
I sat in front of the floor-to-ceiling window of our apartment, watching the
city lights, a cold chill settled in my bones.
The next day, I canceled the venue, tore up the invitations, and burned every
gift she had ever bought me.
On our wedding day, I didn't show up. Instead, I boarded a flight to Milan alone
to join the International Medical Center and begin my career in clinical
research.
From that moment on, I was done with Diana Falcone.
"I’ve explained this to you a thousand times, Nathan. Ian is dying. His bone
cancer is terminal," Diana said.
"The doctors said he has a year at most."
"His final wish is to leave a child behind to carry on his bloodline."
"I owe him my life... this isn't just about a favor; it’s about the honor
between two Mafia families."
Diana stood before me, speaking in that same gentle tone she always used, but
every word felt like a knife twisting in my heart.
Five years ago, on the streets of Chicago, the Moretti family got into a turf
war with Boston drug dealers. She was caught in the crossfire, and Ian took a
bullet for her. Since then, he had become a saint in her eyes.
But I didn't get it.
Sacrificing me as a bargaining chip for her "gratitude"—she called that love?
"It’s just artificial insemination," she continued, trying to persuade me.
"There won’t be anything physical between us... it’s just for the baby."
She paused, her gaze complex. "You love me, don’t you? If you love me, you
should understand. You should support me."
I stood up abruptly, my voice trembling with rage. "Diana, we’re getting married
next month. And you’re behind my back, carrying another man's child. What am I
to you?"
She went silent.
As she looked down, I caught a flash of hesitation in her eyes. It might have
been guilt, or maybe just the habit of a calculated move.
A second later, her face smoothed over. Her voice was low and unshakable.
"Nathan, this isn’t just about me and Ian. This was arranged by the families."
"The Falcones and the Morettis reached a deal during negotiations. As long as we
have a child, the decade-long feud between our families ends."
"I can’t go against the entire family’s decision."
I looked at her and felt like I was staring at a total stranger.
We grew up together. From the slums of Brooklyn to Manhattan Medical School, I
was there for her every step of the way.
I thought we had a clean kind of love. A love that belonged only to us.
But the truth was, she never truly stood by my side. She just saw me as a
"suitable" fiancé—gentle, respectable, smart enough to stay out of trouble, and
knowing my place. I was a polished accessory for the heiress of the Falcone
family.
Her true childhood sweetheart wasn't me. It was the boy she used to play with as a
five-year-old, the son of her family's blood rival. The boy she had kept in her
heart even when they were on opposite sides of a war.
Did she love me? Maybe.
But the moment family, power, "honor," and her childhood sweetheart were put on the scale,
I was always the first thing she was willing to sacrifice.
She wanted to say something else, but her phone cut her off.
She walked quickly to the balcony to answer it, her voice turning soft and
tender.
I couldn't hear what the person on the other end said, but I saw the faint,
gentle smile on her lips.
That was a smile I hadn't seen directed at me in a very long time.
I knew it was Ian.
I looked back at the pregnancy report on the table. The date was from five weeks
ago.
Five weeks ago, Diana had disappeared for an entire night.
She told me there was trouble with the smuggling routes at the New Jersey docks.
But now I realized she was out completing that "bloodline" procedure.
I had been excluded from their plan from the very beginning. They weren't
waiting for my "consent"; they were just waiting for me to be "informed."
I had been looking forward to our wedding day, imagining us walking down the
aisle hand-in-hand.
Now, all those hopes were nothing but smoke, vanishing into thin air without a
trace.
Just then, my phone vibrated, breaking my train of thought.
It was my mentor’s assistant from med school.
"Nathan, I know you’re about to get married, but I wanted to ask one last
time—are you sure you won’t reconsider joining our hospital?"
"You were the most talented student the Professor ever had. He’s always wanted
you on the research team."
"Since you’re getting married, the Professor said he can give you a special
schedule—two months on, two weeks off—so you have time to be with your wife."
My old mentor had started a new surgical research project at a hospital in
Milan. He had invited me six months ago.
He wanted me on the team for advanced clinical studies.
But joining that hospital meant leaving my private life behind. I’d be off the
grid for long stretches—months, maybe a year or more.
At the time, I didn't want to be away from Diana for that long, so I turned him
down.
But now, Diana was carrying another man's child.
Since she never considered our relationship or our upcoming marriage, there was
no reason for this wedding to happen.
"I’ve made up my mind," I said quietly. "I’ll take the position. I don't need
the special leave. I’ll follow the standard project schedule."
The voice on the other end sounded thrilled. "That’s great! The Professor will
be so happy."
"When can you head over? A week after the wedding? That way you can still go on
your honeymoon."
"No," I replied firmly. "I can leave on the day of the wedding."
I looked at the calendar on the desk.
The 10th of next month was circled heavily in red marker.
I had originally circled it to remind myself how many days were left until the
best day of my life.
Now, that date was a countdown to my escape.
In fifteen days, Diana and I would be over. I’d never see her again.
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