My mother arrived wearing a pale blue dress with pearls resting neatly around her neck, looking elegant and composed like a woman who hosted charity galas. She looked exactly like the kind of person people admired, and she did not flinch when she saw the bruise on my face.
Then Daniel took his place beside me at the front of the room, standing tall and calm as if nothing unusual had happened. I turned toward him, hoping for the steady warmth that had once made me feel safe.
Instead, his eyes moved past me and landed on my mother with a strange expression that I had never seen before. A small, satisfied smile spread across his face in a way that made my stomach drop.
Then he spoke clearly enough for the entire room to hear.
“It’s so she learns.”
For one long second, the entire room went silent as if time itself had paused in disbelief. Then laughter spread across the audience, uneven at first but strong enough to fill the space.
I realized at that exact moment that the man I was about to marry had known exactly what had happened to me the night before.
The laughter hurt more than the bruise ever could.
Not everyone laughed fully, since a few people gave those uncomfortable half smiles when they were unsure whether something was a joke or something serious. However, enough people laughed to make my skin feel cold and distant from everything around me.
My mother pressed her lips together as if she disapproved, yet there was a quiet satisfaction in her eyes that confirmed everything I feared. Megan, standing just behind me, leaned closer and whispered urgently.
“Olivia, please do not go through with this, not like this.”
I was no longer standing inside the wedding I had planned for months with careful detail and hope. I was standing inside the truth that I could no longer ignore or soften.
I looked directly at Daniel and spoke with a steady voice.
“What did you just say?”
His smile disappeared and was replaced by irritation, as though I was creating unnecessary drama in the middle of something important.
“Do not start this now,” he muttered under his breath. “We are in the middle of the ceremony.”
“No,” I said, raising my voice so everyone could hear me clearly. “Tell them exactly what you meant.”