I didn’t scream. I didn’t run. I lifted my chin, stepped out of the borrowed heels my cousin had shoved at me that morning, and walked down that aisle barefoot on top of my torn-up vows. Julian laughed harder. “Look at her, she thinks she’s making an exit.” His mother filmed me. Halfway to the doors I heard it — the low rumble of engines. Not one. Six. The chapel’s stained-glass windows lit up red and blue, then went dark again as tinted SUVs blocked out the sun. The doors slammed open before I reached them. Twelve men in charcoal suits, earpieces, gloved hands folded in front. Behind them, a silver-haired woman in a tailored black coat I hadn’t seen in eleven years. My grandmother. The one my father told everyone was “estranged.” The one whose last name I stopped using at fourteen so kids at school would stop asking questions. She walked straight past me, past the frozen guests, and stopped in front of Julian. She didn’t raise her voice. She never has to. “Mr. Whitmore. My granddaughter’s vows are on the floor. Pick them up.” Julian laughed once, then saw the man behind her — the family attorney holding a folder stamped with the Whitmore Holdings logo. His mother’s clapping stopped. She’d recognized the coat before she recognized the face. “Ma’am, I— I didn’t— Emily never said—” Grandmother tilted her head one degree. “Emily doesn’t have to say. I own the building your husband works in. I own the note on this chapel. And as of nine this morning, I own forty-one percent of the airline flying your son’s ‘real fiancee’ in.” She turned to me, and for the first time in eleven years, she smiled. “Ready to go home, Miss Ashford?” Julian was already on his knees, scraping torn paper off the marble. His mother was crying into a napkin. I stepped over him barefoot, took my grandmother’s arm, and didn’t look back. The last thing I heard was one of the SUV doors closing behind me like a vault.
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