My brother-in-law went all out for the proposal, and the ring he chose was absolutely stunning. He picked a rose gold band with a delicate halo setting, featuring a radiant oval-cut diamond as the centerpiece. The diamond had this incredible sparkle that caught the light in the most magical way, and the tiny pavé diamonds around it added just the right amount of extra shimmer.
What made it even more special was the engraving inside the band—a tiny quote from their favorite song. My sister couldn’t stop admiring it, and honestly, neither could I. It’s the kind of ring that feels timeless yet unique, perfectly suited to her style. She’s usually not one to gush over jewelry, but this one had her speechless.
He went for a sleek, modern look—a solitaire diamond on a thin white gold band. Simple, but the diamond was flawless and caught the light like crazy. What made it funny was how nervous he was about picking the 'right' one. He dragged three of her friends to the jeweler for opinions before settling on it. Turns out, she’d pinned almost the exact same ring on her secret wedding board months earlier. Guess he knows her taste better than he thought!
The proposal was low-key but the ring? Total showstopper. A vintage-inspired piece with intricate filigree work on the band and a cushion-cut diamond that looked like it belonged in a classic romance novel. What I loved was how unexpected it was—my sister’s usually into minimalist designs, but this had just enough detail to feel special without being over-the-top. The jeweler told them it was from the 1920s, which added this cool layer of history. She later confessed she’d secretly always wanted something with a bit of old-world charm, and he somehow knew. Now every time she wears it, she gets compliments from strangers.
Oh, that ring was something else! It wasn’t just about the size or the sparkle—it was the thought behind it. He custom-designed it with a jeweler to include a sapphire on either side of the main diamond, which are both their birthstones. The band was platinum, sleek and modern, but what really got me was how it reflected their personalities. She’s practical but loves a touch of elegance, and he nailed it. The way her face lit up when she saw it… priceless. I’ve seen a lot of engagement rings, but this one stood out because it felt so them.
2026-06-21 10:19:52
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My Sister's Fiance
Maya East
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On the night of my sister’s engagement party, my life officially crashes. Again.
All because of one name on the invitation.
Zachary de Sanctis.
My sister’s fiancé. Fiona.
My ex, the guy I punched in the face five years ago.
Heir to the richest old-money family in Europe.
And one tiny detail only God and I know: he’s the father of my twins.
For the past five years, I’ve been hiding out in a little town in Oregon, working as the CEO of a IT firm while chasing two four-year-olds who look more like their father than me.
Isaac and Isabella: two mini De Sanctis clones with the last name Gómez, razor-sharp mouths, brains that run too fast, and a talent for causing trouble exactly when I need peace.
My family knows I came home pregnant and alone. They just never asked who the father is, and I never offered an answer. As far as they’re concerned, I’m still Arabella Gómez, the wild one who lost her way.
I thought going to Fiona’s engagement party would just mean a few hours of fake laughing, then a quiet drive back to my glass-walled house in Oregon and two sets of blue eyes calling me Mommy.
Until Zach walks into my parents’ living room holding Fiona’s hand… and his gaze stays on my face a little too long.
He can’t find out about Isaac and Isabella.
Fiona can’t find out her perfect fiancé was mine first.
And my family can’t know what really happened five years ago.
Hiding a scandal between two rich dynasties is one thing.
Hiding two chaotic twins who are basically their father’s face copy-pasted? That’s the real nightmare.
Being a sweet, gentle, obedient girl, and never voicing her thoughts is what Gretta Mikhaelovich has always done. Because of all her gentleness and how respectable she was in anyone's eyes, the nickname White Princess had been pinned on her.
But bad luck befell her because of one careless night. She gave her virginity to a man she never expected.
Behind the glitter of the city of New York, Gretta's twin—Gallena Mikhaelovich—is arranged to marry Nicholas de Sanctis. A Main Director of an airline company from Italy which is listed as the largest company in the World. He was a good man, generous and kind—at least in the eyes of everyone he forced them to see.
But, Gretta knew better.
Nicholas de Sanctis was a man who took advantage of her unconsciousness and then took her virginity
Nicholas de Sanctis is nothing more than a ruthless mafia man, a demonic figure hiding behind his angelic handsome mask. His ruthlessness is as rugged as his inherent good looks and perfection.
Gretta didn't like the guy, but that didn't stop her from always turning into glass grains when she was around him. Even though that man was her brother-in-law, and being one of the people she despised, other than her parents, Nicholas had always been by her side. Controls her after he finds out what side Gretta always hides behind everyone.
Tell her they are the same.
Loving his touch more than she realized.
Controling her.
Gretta may be the obedient White Princess on the outside, but she loves all the darkness that Nicholas introduces to her.
After all, she tries not to fall for the guy. Because the lines of reality that are between them are so clear. Gretta wasn't going to let him ruin her life even more.
After five years of marriage, I received a wedding invitation from abroad.
The groom is my husband, Arnold Willowstream.
The bride is my younger sister, Yasmine Cooper.
In disbelief, I decide to fly to Ainland and witness the wedding for myself. But the moment I see Arnold holding Yasmine and kissing her deeply, my heart shatters completely.
Fireworks explode in the sky, and glowing words appear above—"Happy Marriage, Mr. Willowstream and Ms. Yasmine."
In that instant, it feels like a blade piercing straight through my chest. Watching them look so happy together, I feel like I'm the one intruding on someone else's marriage.
Love is a game for two—there's no room for a third. If he's already gotten married to someone else, what place do I have left in his life?
Rather than waiting to be pushed out, I choose to walk away on my own and at least keep the last shred of dignity.
On the day of the earthquake, my sister Elena shoved me off the third floor, then burst into tears and said she had only been trying to save me. Everyone believed her.
The only person who stood on my side was Nicolo, the youngest mafia boss Sicily had seen in decades. He lifted me out of the rubble, then proposed to me in front of everyone and said that from that day on, anyone who touched me would answer to him.
Two months later, I was pregnant.
Nicolo bought an entire island and planted it with my favorite irises for our wedding.
My father spent a fortune on a one-of-a-kind gown made just for me. Everyone said I was the most envied woman in the family.
Then I went into labor, and both of them disappeared.
My father said the family had a deal on the line. Nicolo kissed my swollen belly, murmured that he would be back soon, and promised to bring gifts for me and the baby.
Right before I was wheeled into the delivery room, an anonymous video landed on my phone.
Nicolo was wearing a groom's suit.
Elena stood beside him with a hand resting on her pregnant stomach. She was wearing my wedding dress. Her arm was looped through my fiance's as if she had won him fair and square.
At the end of the clip, my father asked in a lowered voice, "If you and Valentina stay married only on paper, what happens to the child she gives birth to?"
Nicolo was quiet for two seconds before he answered. "Valentina grew up with everything. Elena spent her whole life carrying the stain of being illegitimate. Her child will not grow up the same way."
So all that tenderness had never been for me.
It had all been for Elena.
Fine. They could have each other.
The richest man in the country, Sebastian Vance, has a ring custom-made to my exact measurements, worth billions of dollars, for the woman who will be his bride.
In the first life, my stepsister, Mia Lowe, slips on the ring and marries him. Sebastian claws her face, shouting, "She's not the one!"
In the second life, my other stepsister, Lorraine Lowe, loses 30 pounds before marrying him. He shoves her down the stairs anyway and says, "She's not the one either."
In the third life, my stepmother, Vivian Cole, grits her teeth and slices off a piece of her own flesh just to force the ring onto her finger. Sebastian sneers and pushes her under the bathwater, holding her down until her body goes limp.
By the fourth life, out of options and terrified, they finally send me. I slide the ring on, and it fits perfectly.
My entire family lets out a sigh of relief.
But the second Sebastian lays his eyes on me, he draws a knife and stabs me to death. "Why is it still not her? Where is she?"
In the last life, he has his assistant, Owen Hayes, deliver a ring to us. All four of us insist that it won't fit.
Owen shoots us a strange look. "Mr. Vance said the rightful owner of this ring is among you."
After seven years of secretly dating Ross Stockdale, I found a proposal folder hidden in his study.
Inside were a seaside dinner plan, a fireworks schedule, and a handwritten vow card.
I nearly cried from happiness.
I thought Ross was finally going to bring me into the open and give me a home.
But on our seventh anniversary, I saw a short video posted by Samora Leone.
In the video, the Leone family’s private marina was lit like daylight. Fireworks burst over the water while Samora stood before the family representatives with her arm linked through Ross’s.
The caption read:
Thank you for loving me all these years. I said yes.
The man in the video was Ross.
His hand rested on Samora’s waist, and on his finger was the matching silver ring I had designed for him years ago.
Everyone believed Samora was the long-lost daughter of the Leone family.
They were wrong.
The real Leone heir was me.
Reading that scene where he proposes to her felt like watching puzzle pieces click into place. Throughout the book, there were all these little moments—him noticing how she organized her bookshelf by color, the way he'd linger after group conversations just to hear her laugh. It wasn't some grand dramatic gesture, which makes it feel more real to me. The author spent chapters showing his quiet admiration for her resilience, like when she defended that unpopular opinion at the dinner party or nursed that injured bird back to health.
What really got me was the callback to chapter three's rainy afternoon scene, where he pretended not to see her hiding romance novels inside accounting textbooks. His proposal speech referenced that moment directly—'I love the secret sides of you'—which explains why he chose such a private proposal over some public spectacle. Their whole dynamic was built on these understated, genuine connections rather than flashy plot devices.
The proposal scene in that movie was pure magic! He took her to this little rooftop garden she’d always loved, strung up fairy lights everywhere, and had a live pianist playing her favorite song. She thought it was just a fancy date night until he got down on one knee mid-conversation. What really got me was the way he fumbled with the ring box—totally unscripted, apparently. The director kept it in because it felt so real. That mix of nervousness and sincerity is what made it unforgettable.
And the cherry on top? He’d secretly invited both families to watch from behind a trellis. When she said yes, everyone rushed out cheering. My sister’s actress actually cried for real—the crew had to reshoot her reaction three times because her makeup kept running!
That moment in the show was so beautifully crafted—it felt like the entire scene was dripping with romance. He proposed to your sister at this quaint little bookstore they always visited together, the one with the vintage ladder and the smell of old paper. The way the camera lingered on the sunlight filtering through the shelves, catching the dust in the air, made it feel like time stopped.
What really got me was how he hid the ring inside her favorite book, 'Pride and Prejudice,' which she’d reread a dozen times. The way she gasped when she flipped to the marked page—pure magic. Shows don’t always nail proposals, but this one? Chef’s kiss.
The proposal scene in that story was such a heartwarming moment! From what I recall, it happened during the autumn festival arc, around chapter 32 when the maple leaves were falling. The protagonist had been nervously carrying the ring for weeks, waiting for the perfect moment amidst all the chaotic side plots about the family business and the rival suitor drama.
What made it special was how it contrasted with earlier tense scenes—he chose a quiet bench near the riverbank where they'd first met as kids, right after the fireworks display. The way the author wove in callbacks to their childhood while the narrator fumbled through his speech made it feel genuinely touching rather than cliché. I might be biased though—I'm a sucker for seasonal symbolism in romance arcs.