“Claire,” he whispered, panic tightening his voice. “You need to help me.”
I leaned back in my chair, looking out over Rome glowing beneath me.
“What happened?” I asked.
And through the chaos behind him, he said the last thing I expected.
“They can’t pay for the reception.”
At first, I thought he was joking. Connor and Vivian had spent six months turning their wedding into a luxury spectacle—drone footage at the rehearsal dinner, monogrammed champagne walls, custom perfume favors flown in from Paris. Their florist alone probably cost more than my first car. So when Ethan said they couldn’t pay, I thought he’d lost his mind.
“What do you mean they can’t pay?” I asked.
“They thought Vivian’s father was covering the final balance,” Ethan said, his voice unsteady. “Her father says he already paid what he agreed to. Connor says Mom and Dad promised to handle the rest. Mom says she only offered to cover the rehearsal dinner. The venue manager just shut the bar down and won’t reopen anything until someone wires the money.”
In the background, a woman shrieked, “This is humiliating!”
Vivian, I assumed.
Then a man snapped, “You should have read the contract before signing it.”