Bride Mocked The Server Sister, Then The Piano Exposed Everything-ngyen

Grace arrived at the venue as if applause were already waiting for her.

The rain outside had softened into a fine grey mist, the kind that clung to dark coats and made the pavement shine, but inside the ballroom everything was bright enough to hurt.

White roses climbed the tables.

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Crystal glasses stood in perfect lines.

The floor had been polished until the chandeliers looked as if they were floating under everyone’s shoes.

I was behind the bar, checking the sound list with a pencil tucked behind my ear, when her bridesmaids gathered round her like attendants in a painting.

Grace smiled at them with her chin slightly lifted.

Not rudely, not openly.

She was too careful for that.

Her ivory dress fitted her like it had been made by someone afraid of disappointing her, and her pearl earrings flashed each time she turned towards a new compliment.

The catering girls whispered that she looked unreal.

Mr Collins, the venue manager, paused beside the linen trolley and said under his breath that she certainly knew how to make an entrance.

I did not answer.

I had met women like Grace before, but rarely one who was about to marry my brother.

My name is Emily Johnson.

I was thirty-two, unmarried, and still apparently filed in the family archive under “poor Emily” by people who had never asked what it cost to keep a household going.

At the venue, I was useful.

I knew which plug socket could not be trusted with the uplights.

I knew the cupboard where the spare tea towels were kept.

I knew how to stop the side door from squeaking, how to calm a chef when a florist was late, and how to fix a microphone with gaffer tape and a silent prayer.

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