He Mocked Her Scars at Her Wedding. Then Her Groom Took the Mic-nhu9999 - Chainityai

He Mocked Her Scars at Her Wedding. Then Her Groom Took the Mic-nhu9999

The first laugh came before Audrey even reached the altar.

It was not the kind of laugh that fills a room with joy.

It was small, sharp, and passed behind hands like a dirty note in class.

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The ballroom smelled of roses, buttercream, hairspray, and champagne, all of it trapped beneath the warm glow of chandeliers.

Audrey felt the lace collar of her wedding dress brush against the scar tissue under her jaw every time she swallowed.

She had chosen the dress because it made her feel covered without feeling hidden.

There was a difference.

For three years, she had been learning that difference one painful morning at a time.

When she reached Liam at the front of the ballroom, she placed her scarred hand in his.

His fingers closed around hers immediately.

Not carefully.

Not like she might break.

Firmly.

Like she belonged there.

Half the room pretended not to stare.

The other half had stopped pretending.

Audrey kept her eyes on Liam because his face was the only one that had never changed when he looked at her.

He had seen her before the fire.

He had seen her after it.

He had sat beside her in hospital waiting rooms while nurses changed dressings and doctors used words like graft, infection risk, contracture, and permanent.

He had brought her paper coffee from the hospital lobby even when she could barely taste it through the medication.

He had held her hand when she signed the hospital intake forms for another procedure, then held it again when she cried from the pain she had promised everyone she could handle.

Most people told Audrey she was strong because it made them feel better.

Liam never needed her to perform strength.

That was why she loved him.

That was why she trusted him enough to stand in front of a room that included the woman who had spent half her life teaching her she should be grateful for crumbs.

Her aunt Beatrice sat three tables back in a jeweled gown the color of dark wine.

Beside her sat Chloe, Beatrice’s daughter, polished and pretty in the way people noticed before she ever spoke.

Audrey had known them long enough to recognize their smiles.

Beatrice smiled when she wanted witnesses.

Chloe smiled when she wanted permission to be cruel.

Audrey had been twelve when her mother died.

Beatrice took her in with public tears and private accounting.

At school meetings, she introduced Audrey as “my sister’s little girl” with one hand pressed to her chest.

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