The Wedding Toast That Exposed the Daughter They Threw Away-mdue - Chainityai

The Wedding Toast That Exposed the Daughter They Threw Away-mdue

The first thing I noticed when I walked into the St. Aurelia Hotel ballroom was the smell of money.

Not money the way ordinary people know it, not bills folded in a wallet or a debit card declined at a gas pump.

This was the old kind.

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Champagne foam, white orchids, beeswax candles, polished marble, expensive cologne, and lobster butter warming under silver lids along the far wall.

It pressed against me before anyone even turned around.

Five hundred guests moved beneath the crystal chandeliers as if every step had been choreographed.

Women in satin gowns leaned close to one another and laughed with soft throats.

Men in tuxedos held drinks they barely touched.

Waiters in white gloves passed between them carrying caviar, smoked salmon, and tiny spoons of food I could not name even after twenty-one years of being taught how not to look impressed.

I stood near the entrance in a simple navy-blue dress I had bought off a clearance rack three years earlier.

No diamonds.

No designer clutch.

No glossy salon hair.

Just me, low heels, and a small silver bracelet hidden under my sleeve.

For a moment, I considered turning around.

Then I saw my nephew.

Calder Rowe stood beneath an arch of white roses beside his bride, speaking to an older couple near the head table.

He had his mother’s soft eyes, but not her helplessness.

When he spotted me, his whole face changed.

It was not the polite relief wealthy people perform when a difficult relative behaves herself.

It was real relief.

The kind that says someone was afraid you would not come, and now they can breathe again.

“Aunt Maren,” he mouthed across the room.

I lifted one hand.

That was all I trusted myself to do.

I had not stepped into a Rowe family event in twenty-one years.

Not a birthday.

Not a funeral.

Not a board dinner.

Not even my grandmother’s memorial service, though I had stood outside the church afterward in the rain and listened to the bells from the sidewalk.

The last time I had seen my father, Alden Rowe, he had been standing in the front doorway of our old house with my two duffel bags at his feet.

Rain poured down the gutters in sheets.

My mother stood behind him with a handkerchief pressed to her mouth, looking more embarrassed than heartbroken.

My older brother, Griffin, leaned against the staircase with a smirk that made me understand something important even then.

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