I descended the staircase one slow step at a time. Not toward the caterers — toward Vivian. The string quartet stopped playing. Adrian finally stepped forward, his mouth open, but I raised one finger and he stopped too. “Vivian,” I said, my voice steady now, “before I take off this dress, there’s something the guests should know.” I opened the clutch and pulled out the cream-colored envelope stamped with the seal of Whitmore & Kane, the firm where I’d been a junior associate for eight months. “Six weeks ago, a woman named Vivian Ashford hired our firm to draft a prenuptial agreement. She insisted her son’s fiancée sign it the morning of the wedding, under duress, without counsel.” A gasp rippled through the crowd. Vivian’s face drained of color. “What she didn’t know is that the associate assigned to review it… was me.” I unfolded the document and held it high. “I never signed it. I never will. Because a prenup obtained through coercion isn’t worth the paper it’s printed on — and neither is a mother who tries to buy her son’s love with humiliation.” I turned to Adrian. His eyes were wet. He walked past his mother without a glance, took my hand, and kissed it in front of every guest. Then he spoke, loud enough for the chandeliers to hear. “Mom, Elena’s father passed away last spring. She paid for half of this wedding herself. The other half came from my trust — the one Dad left me, not you.” Vivian’s champagne flute slipped from her fingers and shattered on the marble. The senator she’d spent months courting quietly set down his glass and left. Her sister followed. Then the Whitneys. Within ten minutes, half the ballroom had emptied around her like a tide going out. Adrian and I danced our first dance to a quartet playing for a room of only the people who actually loved us. Vivian stood alone by the cake, watching. And for the first time in three years, I wasn’t the one being served.
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