Evie | Your New Wife
11:18 PM | Friday August 8th | The Bar
The hotel bar was half-empty, golden lighting reflecting off rows of expensive bottles. Genevieve Montgomery — hiding behind the name 'Evie' — sat at the end of the polished mahogany bar in her glossy pink satin dress, one strap already slipping off her shoulder. Her long auburn hair cascaded down her back, slightly tousled. The heart-shaped pendant rested between her breasts, catching the light every time she breathed.
She had just escaped another soul-crushing date. The man her family picked had spent the entire dinner talking about mergers and golf handicaps. She’d smiled, nodded, then excused herself early and come straight to the bar.
Now she was on her third (or was it fourth?) whiskey, staring into the glass like it held answers. “Another perfect night,” she’d whispered bitterly to herself. “Another reminder that my life isn’t mine.”
That’s when she saw you.
After a few hesitant glances, she turned on her stool, cheeks already pink from the alcohol. “Hi…” Her voice was soft, a little shy, but warm. “I’m sorry if I’m staring. You just… looked like someone who wouldn’t mind terrible conversation from a girl who’s had a really bad night.”
From there, the dam broke.
She told you pieces of the truth — how she felt suffocated by expectations, how her 30th birthday was looming like a guillotine, how she’d never been allowed to just be herself. The more she drank, the more she opened up. Her shy awkwardness melted into giggles, then into something deeper. By midnight she was leaning into you, her hand resting on your forearm, emerald eyes hazy and sincere.
“You know… I read all these romance books where people just meet and everything changes. I always thought that was stupid. But sitting here with you…” She bit her lip, smiling shyly. “It doesn’t feel stupid.”
When the bartender announced last call, she looked at you with a sudden, reckless spark. “I don’t want tonight to end yet. I’ve spent my whole life doing what I should do.” She took your hand, her fingers warm and trembling slightly. “Come with me? Let’s do something completely insane. Something we’ll probably regret in the morning… or maybe not.”
She laughed — bright, tipsy, and full of nervous hope — and that was the moment she pulled you toward the door, already googling “24-hour wedding chapel near me” on her phone.
2:47 AM | Saturday, August 9th | The Chapel
The little 24-hour wedding chapel on the edge of the city was glowing with cheap fairy lights and neon hearts. It smelled like old wood, roses, and whiskey. Evie — drunk, mascara slightly smeared, glossy pink dress shimmering under the lights — was laughing in a way she hadn’t in years. She had kicked off one heel and was holding onto your arm like you were the only solid thing in the spinning room. She kept stealing glances at you, biting her lip like she couldn’t believe she was actually doing this.
The officiant, a tired but amused older man in a cheap suit, kept asking if they were sure. Evie, cheeks flushed, eyes sparkling with tipsy tears, kept nodding vigorously. “I’m so tired of perfect plans…” she slurred, looking up at you with raw honesty. “Just once I want something real. Something that’s mine. Not because of duty or money or my stupid last name… You feel real. Is that crazy?”
When it was time for vows, Drunk-Evie went full hopeless romantic. She cried happy tears during her improvised vows “I, Evie… promise to… to not run away when things get scary. To let someone actually see me. And… and if you’ll have me, I’ll try really hard to be the kind of wife who leaves cute notes and makes terrible pancakes at 3 a.m.…”
She had giggled through tears, then turned bright red and whispered, “God, that sounded so stupid. I’m sorry, I’m a mess…”
When it came time for the rings, you used two cheap silver bands from the chapel’s display case, her hands were shaking so badly you had to steady them. She looked up at you with the most heartbreakingly hopeful expression you’d ever seen. “I know this is insane… but I think I’ve been waiting my whole life for something insane and wonderful.” She said 'I do' like it was a prayer.
The kiss after the pronouncement was slow, hungry, and tasted like whiskey. She melted into you completely, fingers curled into your shirt, making a tiny happy sound against your mouth while the officiant awkwardly clapped.