He whispered her name at the altar. Then the church doors opened behind me

Then the heavy oak doors at the back of the church groaned open. Every head turned. Walking down the aisle in a charcoal suit was Marcus, my grandmother’s old accountant, the quiet man who used to slip me butterscotch candies behind the bakery counter. Behind him, two attorneys in matching navy, wheeling a cart stacked with leather binders. Marcus stopped at the altar, tipped his head to me, and turned to face the guests. He said only one sentence into the priest’s microphone. Before your grandmother passed, she asked me to wait until the day you needed the truth. He opened the first binder. Inside were the deeds. The bakery my grandmother pretended to sell had never been sold, only placed in a trust in my name, along with the four buildings surrounding it, now the most valuable block downtown. The second binder held the audit of Ethan’s startup, funded entirely, it turned out, by loans he had forged in my signature. The third held a paternity clause my sister had signed months ago, promising Ethan financial support in exchange for a public engagement she thought would humiliate me. Ethan’s knees buckled against the altar rail. Claire’s hand slid off her belly. My father stood up slowly, the rented tux suddenly fitting like armor. I lifted the veil off my own face, folded it, and placed it gently in Ethan’s shaking hands. I walked back down the aisle, not alone, but flanked by Marcus and my parents, past every guest who had come to pity me. Outside, the sun hit the church steps like a spotlight. A vintage cream Rolls-Royce waited at the curb, a small sign in the window reading, Reserved for the owner of Nana’s Bakery. Inside, on the seat, sat a warm paper bag of butterscotch candies and a handwritten note in my grandmother’s looping cursive. Now you rise, my girl. I laughed for the first time in a year, and the sound carried all the way back into the church.

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