Dad Mocked His Banished Daughter, Then The Bride Saluted Her-mdue - Chainityai

Dad Mocked His Banished Daughter, Then The Bride Saluted Her-mdue

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

Not the clean smell of new bills.

Not the sharp leather smell of a wallet opened at a register.

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This was heavier.

Champagne foam, white orchids, beeswax candles, polished marble, expensive cologne, and the faint rich bite of lobster butter drifting from silver warming trays along the far wall.

Five hundred guests moved under crystal chandeliers as if the entire night had been rehearsed for them.

Women in satin gowns laughed with their heads tilted back.

Men in tuxedos held drinks they barely sipped.

Waiters in white gloves moved between them like quiet ghosts carrying caviar, smoked salmon, and tiny spoons of things most people could not name without reading a menu twice.

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

No diamonds.

No designer clutch.

No sprayed-up hair.

Just low heels, a borrowed-looking calm, and a small silver bracelet tucked under her sleeve.

For a moment, she considered turning around.

Then she saw her nephew.

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

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

When he spotted Maren across the room, his face opened with real relief.

Not society relief.

Not polite relief.

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

“Aunt Maren,” he mouthed.

She lifted one hand.

That one small gesture took more courage than anyone in that room understood.

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

Not a birthday.

Not a funeral.

Not a board dinner.

Not even the memorial service for her grandmother, though she had stood outside the church afterward in the rain, unseen, listening to the bells.

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

Rain poured down the gutters in silver sheets.

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

Her older brother, Griffin, leaned against the staircase with a smirk that made Maren understand, even at nineteen, that some people enjoy watching doors close on others.

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