ADVERTISEMENT
By the time I arrived at the ballroom entrance, my parents were standing against the wall like strangers at their own daughter’s wedding. The main family table—the one I had personally reserved for them—was completely occupied by my husband’s relatives, all nine seats filled.
I stared at the table cards.
My parents’ names had disappeared.
She noticed me looking and casually lifted her wine glass.
“Oh, darling,” she said loudly enough for the photographer to stop snapping pictures. “We had to rearrange a few things. The table should appear respectable in photos.”
Celeste slowly turned her gaze toward them, deliberate and cruel. “Somewhere less noticeable. They look poor.”
I waited for Victor to say something.
“Don’t create a scene, Elena,” he murmured. “Mom’s right. Optics matter today.”
The chandeliers glittered overhead. The violinists continued playing. Somewhere behind me, the wedding planner whispered frantically into her headset.
And in that moment, something inside me turned cold.
Not shattered.
Victor leaned closer. “Smile. We’re already running late.”
That was when I smiled.
Not because I forgave them.
Not because I was weak.
But because every camera in that ballroom was pointed toward me, every microphone was live, and every lie they had told was suddenly about to become useful.
For six months, Victor’s family treated me like some decorative charity project. They believed I was marrying above my station. They mistook my silence for gratitude.
They never questioned why the venue manager addressed me as “Ms. Moreau” instead of “Mrs.-to-be.”
They never wondered why every wedding contract carried only my signature.
They never bothered asking who actually owned the building they were standing inside.
I turned calmly toward the wedding planner.
“Bring me the wireless microphone,” I said softly.
Victor frowned immediately. “Elena.”
I kept smiling.
“Now.”….
Part 2
ADVERTISEMENT