Hailey Makes The Boy Bride (2026)

She took his hand, laced her fingers through his, and led him home—not as a loser of a bet, but as the husband she’d decided to win a long time ago. And Leo, the boy bride, finally stopped fidgeting and started smiling.

At midnight, as they walked home past the very bridge he’d built, Leo stopped. He looked down at the dress, then at her.

Hailey shrugged. “Most men don’t make such pretty brides.”

He’d lost the bet on purpose. The bridge was perfect. Hailey Makes The Boy Bride

Normally, the Harvest Festival ended with a pie-eating contest or a square dance. But this year, the mayor had lost a bet. And the mayor, a sharp-eyed woman named Hailey Cross, always collected her debts.

The ceremony was a spectacle. The minister, a man with a wobbling voice, asked, “Do you, Leo, take this woman to be your lawfully wedded wife?”

The loser of the bet was Leo Barns, a quiet, gentle-natured carpenter who had foolishly wagered that his handcrafted bridge could outlast Hailey’s temper in a storm. It hadn’t. The bridge held, but Hailey’s resolve was iron. So Leo, all six feet of flannel and sawdust, found himself standing at the altar of the Pineridge Community Church, wearing a flowing ivory gown that Hailey had ordered from the city. She took his hand, laced her fingers through

“Let them stare,” Hailey said. She picked up a bouquet of wildflowers—his bouquet—and pressed it into his calloused hands. “You lost fair and square. Now, smile. You’re a beautiful bride.”

Leo looked at Hailey. Her eyes weren’t mocking anymore. They were soft, alight with a private joy he hadn’t expected. She wasn’t doing this to humiliate him. She was doing this because for ten years, he’d been too shy to ask her to dance. For ten years, he’d built her bookshelves and fixed her fences, all while staring at his boots.

“You know,” he said, “most men give their wife a ring.” He looked down at the dress, then at her

“You planned this,” he accused, dipping her low.

“Maybe,” she admitted, pulling him back up. “But you let me.”

“Stop fidgeting,” Hailey murmured, adjusting the veil that cascaded down his broad shoulders. She was dressed in a sharp, tailored tuxedo, her auburn hair slicked back. Her grin was that of a cat who had not only caught the canary but had also taught it to sing opera.

“People are staring, Hailey,” Leo whispered, his voice a low rumble. The entire town was indeed staring. Old Mrs. Gable was fanning herself with a hymn book. The Jenkins twins were taking photos with a disposable camera.

Авельдент zakaz@aveldent.ru
Дмитровское шоссе, дом 9, стр. 3, Москва, Россия RU MSK Москва 127434 Москва, Россия
+7 (495) 969-08-30
Авельдент
Дмитровское шоссе, дом 9, стр. 3 Москва RU
+7 495 969-08-30
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