Grace’s Napa Wedding Didn’t Collapse Because I Was Missing From The Guest List — It Collapsed Because The Money Was-QuynhTranJP

The sound Grace made on the other end of the line was not a sob. It was thinner than that, sharper, like silk tearing close to the ear. Then the call ended, and my screen went black.

At 4:12 p.m., Ethan called.

His name sat there for a full second against the pale light from my office windows. Outside, late-afternoon fog had started sliding over the tops of the San Francisco buildings, turning the glass towers into dull silver blocks. My untouched water glass had gone warm. The contracts on my desk were still aligned edge to edge, the silver clip on the venue cancellation catching the light every time a car passed below.

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I answered on the second ring.

‘Avery.’

He said my name carefully, like a man stepping onto a polished floor he had not been told was wet.

In the background, I heard the faint hush of central air and the clink of ice against glass. Ethan was not at the Bennett house. He was somewhere quiet. Somewhere expensive.

‘Did you send those photos?’ he asked.

‘No.’

A pause followed.

‘Did you cancel the wedding?’

My chair creaked softly as I leaned back. ‘I stopped paying for it.’

The line went still.

‘What does that mean?’

I opened my laptop, dragged three files into a single email, and hit send. One was the vendor summary Lily had put together for me that morning. One was the wire confirmation trail from the last ten months. The third was a PDF of the card statements tied to the account Grace used like a private inheritance.

‘Open your email,’ I said.

For a few seconds, there was only the muffled tapping of his keyboard.

Then I heard his breathing change.

‘You paid the vineyard deposit,’ he said.

‘Yes.’

‘You paid for the catering.’

‘Yes.’

‘The transportation package. The rehearsal dinner suite block. The floral retainer.’

Each item came out lower than the one before it, until the last word barely touched the air.

I said nothing.

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