I set the gift bag down on the velvet bench. “You’re right, Brittany. I shouldn’t embarrass you.” I turned to my sister. “Linda, I think it’s time she opened her real wedding gift. The one we agreed I’d give her today.” Linda’s face went white. “Maya, please, not like this.” But I was already pulling the folder from my purse. Eighteen years of receipts. Tuition payments. The down payment on the condo Brittany believed her mother bought her. The orthodontist. The study-abroad semester in Florence she bragged about for years. Every wire transfer traced back to one account: mine. I slid the folder onto the bench beside the gift bag. “The toilets paid for Florence, sweetheart. The toilets paid for your teeth. The toilets paid for the diploma hanging in your fiancé’s living room.” Brittany’s mouth opened, but nothing came out. Her fiancé, Marcus, a quiet accountant I’d always liked, picked up the folder. He read the first page. Then the second. Then he looked at Brittany like he was seeing her for the first time. “You told me your aunt was a freeloader,” he said softly. “You told me she wasn’t invited because she’d cause a scene.” The boutique was silent except for the hum of the chandelier. I picked up my gift bag, because I wasn’t leaving the bracelet I’d saved three months for behind, not for her. “I won’t be at the wedding, Brittany. But the next time you call your mother for help with the mortgage, with the baby, with anything, remember who actually raised you. And remember that I’m done.” I walked out past the mannequins in their white silk. Marcus caught up to me on the sidewalk. “Ma’am,” he said, voice shaking. “I’d like to take you to dinner. I think your sister and I have a lot to talk about. And I think the wedding can wait.” I smiled for the first time that day. Behind us, through the glass, Brittany was sobbing into a five-thousand-dollar veil that, somewhere down the line, I had probably paid for too.
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