He Threw His Mother Out Of His Wedding, Then His Phone Started Ringing-hihehu

My son looked me in the eye at his wedding and asked me, in front of strangers, whether I had really thought I would be invited.

The words did not land all at once.

They moved through me slowly, like cold water seeping under a door.

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I had arrived at the ballroom in the blue dress I bought after months of saving a little here and a little there.

It was not expensive in the way Brooke would have meant expensive, but it was beautiful to me.

Soft blue fabric, a modest neckline, tiny beads at the cuffs that caught the light when I moved my hands.

I had stood in front of my bathroom mirror that morning and imagined Ethan seeing me.

I imagined him smiling the way he used to when he was little and proud of something he had made at school.

I imagined him saying, “Mom, you look beautiful.”

I should have known better by then, but mothers have a dangerous talent for hoping past the evidence.

Outside the venue, the parking lot shimmered in the afternoon heat.

The air smelled like roses from the delivery boxes, perfume from the guests, and warm asphalt under polished shoes.

Through the double doors, I could hear music being tested, one careful note after another, as if the day itself were trying to sound gentle.

At the reception table, a young woman in black checked the guest list.

Then she checked it again.

Then she glanced at my face with the kind of pity people try to hide and fail at.

“I’m sorry, ma’am,” she said softly. “Your name isn’t here.”

I smiled because the first instinct of a humiliated woman is often to make the other person comfortable.

“That can’t be right,” I said.

She ran her finger down the page one more time.

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