Hand over the bouquet, sweetheart, the real bride doesn’t want her flowers touched by

“You’re right, Vanessa,” I said softly. “The real bride shouldn’t be touched by the help. So I’ll go.” She smirked at her bridesmaids like she’d won something. I walked into the hallway, opened my banking app, and canceled three pending transfers: the final venue payment, the florist balance, and the catering tip pool. Then I texted Daniel one sentence. “Ask Vanessa who actually paid for today, and check the email I’m forwarding you now.” I forwarded six months of receipts, screenshots of her messages calling me her “personal ATM,” and the voice note where she laughed about marrying Daniel for his family’s lake house. I slipped my phone away and walked toward the lobby. I didn’t even make it to the elevator before I heard her scream my name. Daniel was already in the hallway, phone in his hand, face pale. Vanessa came running in her half-zipped gown, mascara streaking. “Claire, tell him it’s a joke, tell him right now!” I turned slowly. “I’m the help, remember? The help doesn’t speak at real weddings.” Daniel looked at her like he was seeing her for the first time. “You told me your parents paid. You told me Claire was jealous of you.” The venue coordinator stepped out, clipboard in hand. “Ma’am, we just received notice the final balance was withdrawn. We need a card on file in the next ten minutes or the ceremony cannot proceed.” Vanessa spun toward me, shaking. “Fix it. Fix it right now, you owe me, I’m your sister.” I picked a single peony from the arrangement on the lobby table and tucked it behind my ear. “No, Vanessa. You owe me. Six months, eighteen thousand dollars, and every birthday you ruined since we were kids.” Daniel quietly slid the ring off his finger and placed it on the coordinator’s clipboard. “Use this toward whatever she still owes.” Then he turned to me. “Claire, can I buy you a coffee? I think I owe you an apology I didn’t know I needed to make.” I walked out into the sunlight, and for the first time in years, I didn’t look back.

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