I set my fork down slowly. The clink echoed louder than it should have. Vanessa laughed, the kind of laugh meant to invite the room to laugh with her. A few of Catherine’s friends obliged. Mom whispered, “I’m sorry, sweetheart, I’ll go change,” and turned toward the door, the little gift still in her hands. That was when I stood up. “Mom, wait. Sit down. Right here. Next to me.” Vanessa’s smile tightened. “Hannah, don’t make a scene.” “Oh, I’m not making one,” I said. “I’m ending one.” I pulled an envelope from my clutch — the one I’d been carrying for three weeks, hoping I wouldn’t have to use it. Inside was the loan agreement Mom had co-signed for Vanessa’s dress, the venue deposit she’d quietly covered, and the receipts for the honeymoon suite Vanessa had charged to Mom’s emergency credit card “just until payday.” Sixty-two thousand dollars. I handed the papers to Vanessa’s new husband, Daniel, a kind man who, judging by his widening eyes, had been told his bride paid for everything herself. “Congratulations on the wedding,” I said gently. “You should know your wife’s dress was funded by the woman she just called a cleaning lady.” Catherine’s champagne flute lowered. Daniel read. His jaw locked. Then I turned to the room. “My mother buried her husband, worked sixty-hour weeks, and gave my sister a wedding she couldn’t afford herself. Tonight, I’m clearing her debt.” I slid a cashier’s check across the table — my entire promotion bonus. “Mom, you don’t owe anyone here a single dollar. Or an apology. Or that seat by the door.” I pulled out the chair beside mine. Eleanor sat, tears finally spilling. Daniel stood, looked at Vanessa, and quietly said, “We need to talk. Outside.” Vanessa’s perfect day unraveled in heels across the marble floor. Mom squeezed my hand. “You didn’t have to.” I kissed her temple. “Neither did you. For twenty-nine years. But you did.”
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