Aunt Cancelled My Wedding For 300 Guests — Then The Owner’s Daughter Arrived-ngyen

My aunt called the venue and said, “Cancel that small wedding, we’re booking for 300 guests.” The manager hesitated. “Let me call the owner,” he said. Minutes later, a woman walked in, looked straight at him, and said, “Hi, Mum, what’s the problem?”

Two months before my wedding, I stood in the entrance hall of Rosewood Hall with my signed contract in my hand and tried to understand how a day I had paid for had somehow become available to someone with louder money.

The lobby was all polished wood, white flowers and cold marble under sensible shoes.

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A small fountain whispered beside the wall, too delicate and expensive-looking to belong to real life.

Beyond the tall windows, the lawn waited under a pale grey sky, clean and green and trimmed to perfection.

I had imagined standing there with Ethan.

I had imagined his hand finding mine just before the music began.

I had imagined looking out at a small group of people who loved us because they loved us, not because our names looked impressive printed on thick card.

That was what Rosewood Hall had meant to me.

It was never just a venue.

It was proof.

Proof that I had survived being pushed out.

Proof that I could build something without my parents’ approval.

Proof that love could still have warm light, white roses, a proper meal, and a room full of people who were not there to measure me.

Then the young woman behind the desk lowered her eyes and said, “I’m very sorry, Miss Morgan, but your booking has been cancelled.”

For a moment, the words did not land properly.

They moved around me like sound through glass.

Cancelled.

One neat word for six months of saving.

One neat word for every late evening, every extra appointment, every lunch made at home because I could not justify buying one, every small thing I had told myself I did not need.

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