A Groom Stopped His Mother After She Shamed His Little Stepdaughter-Quieen - Chainityai

A Groom Stopped His Mother After She Shamed His Little Stepdaughter-Quieen

The champagne glass made the smallest sound when Veronica tapped it.

One bright little ping carried across the ballroom, slipped under the string quartet, and made the whole room look up.

I remember the smell of roses first.

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Not the flowers on the tables, exactly, but the warm, heavy smell of roses after hours under chandelier light, mixed with butter from dinner rolls and the sweet bite of champagne.

I remember the linen napkin under my hand, too stiff from starch, folded into a shape nobody would ever use in real life.

And I remember my daughter, Ivy, standing beside my chair in her pale yellow dress, both hands gripping the skirt like she was afraid of taking up too much room.

She was six years old.

Six is still young enough to believe adults know what they are doing.

Six is also old enough to remember the exact sentence that breaks something inside you.

I was trying to smile because it was my wedding day.

That is what brides are supposed to do.

You smile when the photographer says one more even though your cheeks hurt.

You smile when a cousin mispronounces your name during a toast.

You smile when someone asks if you are relieved to finally have a real family now, as if the child standing beside you has been imaginary for six years.

Daniel’s hand found mine under the table.

He squeezed once, and I knew he had heard the edge in his mother’s voice before she even spoke the sharp part.

Veronica stood near the head table in a cream silk dress that looked soft from far away and expensive up close.

One hand rested on Daniel’s shoulder.

It was not affectionate.

It was ownership.

Henry, Daniel’s father, stood beside her with his hands folded in front of him, chin lifted, eyes moving over the guests the way a man looks over a room he believes he has purchased.

Sophie, Daniel’s sister, leaned back with her champagne glass already smiling.

That smile was how I knew she knew what was coming.

‘As the mother of the groom,’ Veronica said, ‘I want to welcome everyone.’

The guests smiled back because people usually trust the start of a toast.

They expect tenderness.

They expect a joke about childhood.

They expect a mother to embarrass her son in the harmless way mothers do, with school pictures or old nicknames.

But Veronica had never been harmless with me.

She had just been careful.

For almost two years, she had made her dislike small enough to deny.

She called my apartment cozy in a tone that made the word sound like an inspection failure.

She once asked Daniel whether Ivy’s father was in the picture while I was standing beside him, as if I were a form he had not finished filling out.

When Ivy brought her a crayon drawing of all of us under a yellow sun, Veronica said, ‘How sweet,’ then set it face down on the sideboard before the coffee was even poured.

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