A Pregnant Wife Fell At Her Sister's Wedding. Then The Envelope Opened-Quieen - Chainityai

A Pregnant Wife Fell At Her Sister’s Wedding. Then The Envelope Opened-Quieen

The chair leg snapped at 7:42 p.m., right as Claire Bennett lifted her water glass beside the sweetheart table.

There was no warning creak.

No slow tilt.

Image

Just a clean, ugly crack under the music and the cold shock of marble tile rushing up beneath her.

She was eight months pregnant, so her body did not think about pride first.

It thought about the baby.

Both of her hands flew to her stomach before her hip even finished hitting the floor.

The water glass burst beside her knee, and cold water soaked through the front of her navy maternity dress.

For one second, the Magnolia House ballroom went so still Claire could hear the ice inside one of the champagne buckets shift.

The room smelled like white roses, buttercream frosting, hairspray, and spilled champagne.

Chandeliers burned above the tables.

The band cut off mid-note.

Somewhere near the dance floor, a phone made the tiny beep that meant somebody had started recording.

Claire’s palm pressed against the side of her belly.

She waited.

One kick.

One roll.

One sign.

Then her sister Brooke laughed behind her hand.

It was not loud laughter.

That made it worse.

It was the private little laugh of someone who had already decided Claire’s pain was an inconvenience at her wedding.

Tiffany, Brooke’s maid of honor, lifted her champagne flute and looked down at the broken chair.

‘I told you that seat looked cheap,’ she said.

A few bridesmaids turned their faces into their napkins.

Not because they were horrified.

Because they were trying not to laugh too openly.

Claire had known humiliation before.

She had known the humiliation of counting tips after a double shift at Rosie’s Diner and realizing the electric bill would still be late.

She had known the humiliation of standing in a grocery aisle comparing two kinds of peanut butter because twenty-seven cents suddenly mattered.

She had known the humiliation of loving a man who called her dramatic every time she asked him where he had been.

But this was different.

This was public.

This was polished.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *