I almost canceled the wedding that night. Not because I didn’t love my fiancé, Ethan, but because I was exhausted—exhausted from managing my mother’s moods, protecting her image, and pretending her cruelty was just “stress.” Ethan told me to try to sleep and promised we would deal with everything together after the ceremony. I wanted to believe him. I needed to believe him.
So I showed up.
By the time I arrived at the ceremony hall, people had already noticed. Conversations softened into murmurs. My cousins stared. My mother arrived wearing a pale blue dress with pearls at her throat, looking composed and elegant—the kind of woman who chaired charity events and wrote handwritten thank-you notes. The kind people described as “graceful.” She looked at my face and didn’t flinch.
Then Ethan stepped beside me at the front. I turned toward him, hoping for the steady look I had fallen in love with. Instead, his eyes moved past me and settled on my mother. A strange smile spread across his face, small and satisfied.
Then he said, clearly enough for the room to hear:
“It’s so she learns.”
For a moment, the room went completely still.
Then people laughed.