Then a cane tapped once against the marble. Grandmother Ashford, eighty-four years old, rose slowly from her wheelchair in the second row. She walked past Vivienne without a glance and climbed the altar steps to stand beside me. She took the microphone from the priest with the calm of a woman who had buried two husbands and outlived every enemy she ever had. She said, that journal is not Elena’s. That is the journal I gave her last Christmas, and every word inside it is a letter she wrote to me during my chemotherapy, when my own daughter-in-law could not be bothered to visit. She turned to Vivienne and said, you read my granddaughter’s prayers for my life out loud and called them greed. Then she lifted a second envelope from her purse. Inside was the amended family trust, signed six weeks earlier, naming Elena as the sole trustee of the Ashford Children’s Hospital Foundation, the wing Grandmother had built in secret. Vivienne’s face collapsed. Julian finally looked at me, tears streaming, and whispered that he had known about the journal all along, that his grandmother had shown him every letter, that he was marrying me because of them, not despite them. He knelt right there in his tuxedo, took my trembling hand, and asked me again, in front of everyone, if I would still have him. Grandmother squeezed my shoulder and murmured, breathe, my darling, the pearls are holding. I said yes. The church erupted. Vivienne walked out alone. Grandmother stayed for every dance.
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