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The pastor cleared his throat. “Shall we continue?”
“We should,” Noah said quietly.
At the reception—white lights cascading like stars and the smell of cinnamon and roasted pecans filling the hall—Emily pulled Noah aside.
“You humiliated me,” she whispered, not noticing that cadence carries.
“No,” he replied calmly. “I corrected something that was wrong.”
“This was my wedding.”
“And she is my mother,” Noah said, a new firmness forming the borderlines of their marriage. “If we’re building a life together, respect doesn’t start tomorrow. It starts in the room we’re standing in.”
Emily’s silence was not surrender. It was processing.
Later, near the dessert table, she finally approached me again. Her lipstick blurred slightly—proof of private tears.
“Megan,” she said softly, “can we talk somewhere quiet?”
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