“The biggest,” I beamed. “My granddaughter’s happiest day.”
I turned and walked toward the grand wrought-iron gates. The air was filled with the soft, elegant melody of a string quartet playing in the distance. The scent of hundreds of white floral arches perfumed the breeze. Two hundred guests—family, friends, neighbors—were arriving, dressed to impress, laughing and chatting as they flowed toward the entrance.
Several guests recognized me, offering warm smiles and compliments on the breathtaking venue. I nodded graciously, feeling a quiet sense of ownership over the beauty surrounding us.
Because I hadn’t just been invited to this wedding. I had built it.
For the past six months, my son, Richard, and his wife, Susan, had made my living room their second home. They would sit on my velvet couch, drinking the coffee I brewed, speaking in soft, calculated, desperate tones.
“You know, Mom, the economy is so tough right now,” Richard would sigh, running a hand through his perfectly styled hair.
“We just want Clara to have her dream wedding,” Susan would add, her eyes wide and pleading. “She deserves to feel like a princess, Denise. But we simply can’t afford it.”
Naively, blindly, I had opened my heart—and my checkbook.
“How much does a dream wedding cost?” I had asked.
They had shown me the brochure for Green Valley. The catering included fresh lobster. The floral arrangements cost more than my first car. Clara’s custom designer gown was astronomically priced.
And I paid for every single dollar.
Over $100,000. All drawn from the careful savings my late husband, Robert, had left to ensure I could live comfortably and help the family when truly needed. I signed the vendor contracts. I managed the wire transfers. My name, Denise Parker, was printed on every single receipt and invoice.
I approached the main entrance, my heart light. Richard and Susan were standing near the grand archway, greeting the arriving guests. My son looked impeccably sharp in a tailored tuxedo. Susan sparkled in a bright emerald-green gown that caught the sunlight a bit too aggressively.
“Richard, my boy,” I smiled, stepping forward, my arms open to hug him. “Everything looks absolutely wonderful.”
He didn’t step forward to meet my embrace. He didn’t even smile.
His eyes, when they met mine, were cold. Incredibly, terrifyingly cold. They were the eyes of a stranger looking at an inconvenience. Susan immediately turned her back, pretending to be deeply engrossed in adjusting a floral arrangement on a nearby pedestal.
“Mom,” Richard said, his tone icy and flat. “What are you doing here?”
I let out a short, confused laugh, my arms slowly dropping to my sides. “What am I doing here? Richard, it’s a joke, right? I came to my granddaughter’s wedding.”
Richard didn’t laugh. He turned to the professional receptionist standing behind a velvet rope and snatched the leather-bound guest list from her hands. He held it up, looking at it for a long, agonizing moment.
The string quartet seemed to fade. The chatter of the two hundred guests bottlenecking behind me suddenly died down.