When His Family Hid Her Parents At The Wedding, She Took The Mic-Tep

The first thing Elena noticed was not the flowers.

It was not the chandelier, even though the ballroom ceiling glittered like the inside of a jewelry box.

It was not the music, even though the violinists were playing the exact song she had chosen three months earlier while sitting at her kitchen table with her mother.

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It was her parents standing against the wall.

Her mother held her old pearl purse in both hands, the same purse she brought to every important day because buying a new one had always felt unnecessary when the old one still closed if she pressed the clasp just right.

Her father stood beside her in a brown suit he had saved for months to buy.

He had looked so proud that morning when he knocked softly on the bridal suite door and asked if his little girl was ready.

Now he looked like a man trying to make himself smaller.

Elena stopped at the ballroom entrance with her bouquet in her hands and the lace at her wrist scratching her skin.

The head table was full.

Every chair.

All nine seats.

That table had been arranged by Elena herself.

Her parents were supposed to sit there.

Her aunt was supposed to sit there.

The people who had been there for birthdays, school meetings, hospital waiting rooms, rent scares, and quiet Sunday dinners were supposed to sit there.

Instead, Victor’s relatives had taken the entire table.

His aunt was already settled in.

Two cousins leaned over the place settings like they were checking the work.

His uncle had pushed his chair back too far, laughing with a champagne glass in one hand.

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