I took a slow breath and smiled. “Vivienne, before I answer, I think Preston should see something.” I reached into my purse and pulled out a cream envelope stamped with the seal of Whitfield & Crane Appraisers. Preston, a jeweler’s son, leaned forward with polite curiosity. I slid the papers across the table. “That sapphire you want isn’t a sapphire. My father couldn’t afford one in 1978. It’s blue glass in a nickel setting. Appraised value: forty-two dollars.” Vivienne’s face went the color of her rosé. Brooke choked on her champagne. “But,” I continued, unfolding a second document, “since you’ve spent three years calling me a gold-digging waitress, I had something else appraised too. The Cartier bracelet you ‘lent’ me at the rehearsal dinner and demanded back the next morning? The one you accused me of stealing in front of Daniel’s grandmother?” I paused. “Costume. Twelve dollars on a resale site. I have the listing.” Gasps rippled down the table. Grandmother Eloise set down her fork. Vivienne stammered that I was lying, but Preston was already examining the paperwork, his jaw tight. Then Daniel finally stood. For three years he’d asked me to keep the peace, to let his mother’s cruelty slide. He walked around the table, took my hand, and faced her. “Mom. Apologize to my wife. In front of every person here. Or we leave, and you don’t meet our daughter when she’s born in November.” The silence cracked open like glass. Vivienne opened her mouth, closed it, and burst into humiliated tears. Brooke hissed at her to just do it. She didn’t. She fled inside. Grandmother Eloise reached across the table, squeezed my hand, and slid a small velvet box toward me. “This was my mother’s,” she whispered. “A real sapphire. For the baby. Because you, my dear, are the only woman in this family who understands what heirlooms actually mean.” Daniel and I drove home that afternoon with the windows down. I never took off my father’s glass ring.
Related Posts
You’re forty-two, childless, and about to be fired, Elena — so sign the postnup
“Before I sign,” I said softly, “can I ask who drafted this?” Julian rolled his eyes. “Bergman and Cole. The best. Don’t bother reading it, […]
Grandma, just sign the house over to Tyler. You’re too senile to live alone
“Brittany, sweetheart,” I said, “before I sign anything, why don’t we let everyone hear what Tyler told me on Sunday?” The room went quiet. Tyler’s […]
Sign the house over to your brother by Friday, or I’ll make sure you
I didn’t argue with Marcella. I just nodded, wiped my eyes, and asked her to come back Friday at noon with her husband and our […]
