Around us, the ballroom had begun to slow. Conversations stumbled. Heads turned. The string quartet at the far side of the room faltered into an awkward half-finished phrase and then stopped entirely. Somewhere near the dance floor, a waiter lowered a tray because even hired staff know when they are suddenly standing inside a story they’ll tell later.

Bianca took one more step closer.

Her veil trembled slightly behind her shoulders. Diamonds flashed at her ears. Her makeup was immaculate, but there was color rising too fast under her foundation now, anger fighting with champagne and panic.

“Look at you,” she said, louder this time. “You really thought you could stand here with people like us?”

The words triggered another ripple of amusement from the guests nearest us.

People always laugh too easily when they think someone has already been judged for them.

I stood there with my glass of water still in one hand, untouched and sweating against my palm, and I thought, not for the first time in my life, that cruelty becomes much easier for a room when it is performed by the bride.

Then a man’s voice cut through the laughter like a blade.

“Do you even know who she is?”

Everything stopped.