Then, during the toasts, she stood up in her champagne silk and pointed at me across the room. Look at this creature, she laughed into the microphone, we are paying good money and they send us a widow who cannot even keep a tray steady. The room went quiet. Two hundred guests turned. My tray shook, just once, and a single flute tipped and shattered on the marble. Vivian threw her napkin at my feet. Clean this mess up, Margaret, and then take your sad little apron and get out of my daughter’s wedding before I have you thrown out with the garbage. I knelt down. I picked up the glass, piece by piece, my hands steady now. Then I stood up, walked to the microphone stand, and gently took the mic from her hand. Good evening, I said. My name is Margaret Ashcroft-Doyle. I am the majority owner of the Rothsberg Hotel Group. My late husband left me this building, and eleven other properties, and I work the floor on Saturdays because I promised him I would never forget what our staff endures. Vivian’s champagne glass froze halfway to her mouth. The groom, her own son-in-law, closed his eyes like a man watching a car crash. I turned to the bride, who was crying quietly into her bouquet. Sweetheart, I said, your reception is on the house tonight. Order anything. But Vivian, I said, turning back, your dress, your suite, your open bar, those are on you. And you are no longer welcome on any property I own, effective immediately. Security walked her out through the kitchen, past the dishwashers she had sneered at three hours earlier. The bride hugged me before the cake was cut. I went home at midnight, hung up my apron, and slept better than I had in two years.
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