Pregnant Wife Pushed Over A Necklace At Her Sister-In-Law’s Wedding-hihehu

I used to think a marriage could be repaired the way you fix an old house.

You find the crack, you patch it, you paint over it, and you tell yourself the foundation is still good.

For years, that was what I did with David.

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I patched the silence after he let his mother talk over me at dinner.

I painted over the shame when Jessica borrowed my things and returned them damaged, then laughed when I noticed.

I sealed every little split with patience because I believed patience was what good wives were supposed to have.

By the morning of Jessica’s wedding, I was eight months pregnant, tired in a way sleep no longer fixed, and still trying to make myself believe my husband would become gentle when the baby came.

The estate was the kind of place Jessica had described for years like it already belonged to her.

It sat back from a county road behind a long driveway, all pale stone, tall windows, trimmed hedges, and a front porch where a small American flag moved in the morning breeze.

Inside, the wedding party had taken over every polished surface.

There were garment bags draped over chairs, paper coffee cups left on windowsills, makeup kits opened across a sideboard, and white roses waiting in buckets near the front hall.

The whole place smelled like hairspray, perfume, hot fabric from the veil steamer, and the burnt coffee somebody had abandoned beside a stack of programs.

A venue coordinator with a headset kept checking her clipboard.

At 8:17 a.m., she taped a printed ceremony timeline near the entry table and asked everyone to stay on schedule.

No one listened.

Jessica never listened when the morning was supposed to orbit around her.

She stood in the dining room in a satin robe, her hair pinned halfway up, a tiara waiting in a velvet box beside her elbow.

I was beside the mahogany table, one hand under my belly, the other resting over the diamond necklace at my throat.

The necklace had belonged to my mother.

It was not just expensive, though the appraisal tucked into my purse said $100,000 in clean black print.

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