Son Threw His Mum Out At His Wedding—Then Asked For The Farm Keys-heuh

The music had just faded when I saw Olivia lean towards my son.

I did not hear what she said, but I watched her mouth move against his ear and saw his whole body change.

One second Ethan was standing there in his wedding suit, laughing too loudly at something one of his friends had said.

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The next, his jaw tightened and his eyes found me across the reception room.

I was wearing my mother’s blue dress.

It was not grand, not glittering, not the sort of thing anyone could mistake for a bride’s attempt at attention.

It had long sleeves, a modest neckline, and the careful cut of something made to last.

My mother had worn it at my wedding, and after she died it had sat wrapped in tissue paper at the back of the wardrobe, smelling faintly of lavender and old cupboards.

When Ethan asked me to wear something meaningful, I thought of that dress first.

He had smiled when I mentioned it.

He had said, “Mum, that would be perfect.”

So I wore it.

I stood near the top table in blue while the room glowed with warm lights and white roses, with the kind of polished brightness that makes family photographs look kinder than life.

There were two hundred guests there.

People from Olivia’s side, people from Ethan’s work, old neighbours, cousins I had not seen properly in years, and a few friends who still remembered Robert standing in our kitchen with mud on his boots and a grin on his face.

Robert should have been there.

That was the thought I kept pressing down all afternoon.

He should have been there to straighten Ethan’s tie, to make some quiet joke at the back of the room, to squeeze my hand when the vows were spoken.

Instead, I had carried him there in little things.

The handkerchief in my handbag.

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