The Fountain Shove At Her Sister’s Wedding Broke The Ballroom-ngyen

I knew the wedding would hurt before I had even stepped properly inside the hotel.

There are some rooms you enter already braced, shoulders tight, smile prepared, every answer folded neatly behind your teeth.

My sister Allison’s wedding was one of those rooms.

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The lobby smelled of lilies, floor polish, and rain carried in on expensive coats.

A line of guests drifted towards the ballroom, laughing softly, their shoes clicking over the marble like they had practised belonging somewhere like that.

I stood near the seating chart with my invitation in one hand and my clutch in the other, waiting for the usher to find the name my family had always managed to misplace when it mattered.

‘Meredith Campbell,’ I said.

He ran a finger down the card list, paused for the smallest possible second, and looked up with the expression of someone trying not to comment.

‘Table nineteen.’

I glanced across the ballroom.

The top table was glowing beneath tall arrangements of white orchids.

My parents sat there already, my mother in pale blue with pearls at her throat, my father with his broad wedding smile, both of them angled towards Allison as if she were the only daughter ever born to them.

Table nineteen was not near them.

It was not even near the middle.

It sat close to the service doors, where waiters would come and go all night with plates, trays, tea urns, and the warm metallic smell of the kitchen.

‘Thank you,’ I said.

The usher looked as though he expected me to complain.

I did not.

Complaining would have made the insult official.

I walked to my seat and placed my clutch beside the folded napkin, careful not to look as though I noticed the gap they had made around me.

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