She Paid for Her Brother’s Engagement. Then His Fiancée Humiliated Her-haohao - Chainityai

She Paid for Her Brother’s Engagement. Then His Fiancée Humiliated Her-haohao

The first thing I remember about the Hartley Grand Ballroom is the smell. Lemon polish on the marble floor, lilies arranged too heavily on every table, and the expensive bite of red wine breathing from crystal glasses.

It was the kind of room Bianca loved because it made ordinary people feel underdressed before they even spoke. High ceilings, gold trim, white linen, rented elegance. Everything looked effortless because I had paid for it to look that way.

My brother had called me six months earlier from outside his apartment, voice cracked and desperate. He said Bianca’s family expected a proper engagement party. He said he was behind. He said he would pay me back.

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I knew he probably wouldn’t. After our parents died, I became the person who handled emergencies. Tuition forms. Medical bills. Car repairs. Birthday checks I pretended were from both of us because I wanted him to feel less alone.

At Mom’s funeral, he had squeezed my hand and whispered, “It’s just us now.” For years, that sentence made me forgive too much.

Bianca never liked me. Not openly at first. She smiled with all her teeth and called me “practical” in the tone other women used for stains. She asked where I bought my shoes. She asked whether my dress was “vintage” when she meant poor.

Her mother, Marjorie, was worse because she never needed volume. She could insult a person with a soft laugh, a tilted head, a pause long enough to make everyone else understand they were supposed to join in.

Still, I paid the deposit. I signed the Hartley Grand Ballroom contract. At 3:41 p.m. on the day of the party, I signed the final addendum. At 4:12, my card cleared the vendor hold.

At 4:37, the catering manager emailed the payment authorization marked PRIMARY GUARANTOR. My name was on the documents. Not my brother’s. Not Bianca’s. Mine.

That mattered more than any of them understood.

By the time I arrived, the ballroom was already humming. Glasses chimed. The DJ tested a soft jazz track. Bianca stood near the floral arch in a pale dress that probably cost more than my rent.

My own dress was white, thrifted, clean, and carefully steamed in my bathroom before I came. I had chosen it because it made me feel simple and dignified. I did not know Bianca had already decided it offended her.

My brother saw me first. His smile was quick, guilty, and gone. He looked over his shoulder toward Bianca before he hugged me, as if checking whether affection required permission.

“You made it,” he said.

“Of course I did,” I answered. “It’s your engagement.”

He flinched at that, almost imperceptibly. Then Bianca arrived with two bridesmaids and a glass of Cabernet in her hand. The wine was dark enough to look black near the rim.

“You shouldn’t have come,” she whispered when she leaned in. “The stench of your cheap clothes is ruining my party.”

Before I could answer, she tilted her wrist. Not a stumble. Not an accident. A choice. The Cabernet poured down the front of my dress in one smooth, deliberate stream.

The wine hit warm, then turned cold as it soaked through the fabric. I heard it hit the floor. I smelled oak, fruit, and humiliation rising from my chest under the chandelier light.

The DJ missed a beat. Someone gasped. A waiter stopped moving with a tray balanced in one hand. The whole room seemed to inhale and then refuse to exhale.

Bianca stepped back and smiled.

She wanted a scene. She wanted me to cry, grab napkins, apologize for being in the way. She wanted every person in that room to understand where she believed I belonged.

I looked at my brother.

He was standing close enough to intervene. Close enough to say my name. Close enough to take one step between us and make the entire room choose decency.

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