She Was Humiliated at Dinner. One Legal Call Exposed the Real Owner-mdue - Chainityai

She Was Humiliated at Dinner. One Legal Call Exposed the Real Owner-mdue

The water was colder than Cassidy expected.

That was the first thing her body understood before her mind could name the humiliation.

It hit her hair, her shoulders, the front of her pale blue maternity dress, and then slid beneath the fabric in thin icy paths that made her lungs lock.

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For one stunned second, the entire dining room seemed to shrink around the sound of it.

The splash.

The chair legs scraping.

The tiny hard kick inside her stomach.

Cassidy’s hand went to her belly before she even looked up.

Diane Morrison stood beside her with the bucket still angled in her hand.

The older woman’s expression was not surprise.

It was satisfaction dressed up as manners.

“Oops,” Diane said, smiling as if she had dropped a napkin instead of dirty water over a pregnant woman. “Look at the bright side… at least you finally had a bath.”

For a moment, nobody spoke.

Then Brendan laughed.

That laugh told Cassidy more than his divorce papers ever had.

It was not nervous.

It was not confused.

It was the easy laugh of a man who had been waiting for someone else to make cruelty feel acceptable.

Jessica, his new girlfriend, pressed one manicured hand to her mouth, but the sound slipped out anyway.

She looked down at Cassidy’s soaked shoes, wrinkled her nose, and said, “Someone get her an old towel. We don’t want that smell getting on the expensive linen.”

The table stayed bright beneath the chandelier.

The rosemary chicken still steamed faintly from the platter.

Diane’s expensive candle burned in the center of the table, making the crystal glasses shine as though nothing ugly could happen in a room that polished.

Water fell from Cassidy’s sleeve onto the floor.

Drop by drop.

Gray against the spotless shine.

She had been invited because Brendan said they should all be civil.

That was the word he liked when he wanted her quiet.

Civil.

Civil meant accepting Jessica at the table.

Civil meant letting Diane call her dramatic.

Civil meant sitting through jokes about money, pregnancy, and how some women did not know how to keep a husband.

Cassidy had come because she was tired of being painted as unstable.

She had come because every refusal became another Morrison story about how difficult she was.

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