He Misspelled My Name On The Wedding Invite, Then Used It To Fake A $12,600 Gift-eirian

My father’s champagne glass stayed frozen halfway to his mouth.

For once, nobody was asking me to fix anything.

Carly lowered the microphone, and the little pop from the speaker sounded sharper than the fountain behind her. The guests sat in white folding chairs with programs in their laps, faces turned between Ethan, Carly, and me like they were watching a tennis match where the ball had suddenly become a knife.

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Ethan’s mouth opened twice.

Nothing came out.

Then my mother moved first.

Not toward Carly. Not toward Ethan.

Toward me.

Her blue dress whispered against the grass as she crossed the aisle with that tight church-smile she used when someone had embarrassed her in public. Her perfume hit before her hand did—powder, roses, and panic.

“Caleb,” she said softly, “come with me.”

I didn’t move.

She leaned closer. “Now.”

Across the garden, Ethan had finally found his voice.

“She’s lying,” he snapped, pointing at Carly. “She’s emotional. She’s trying to punish me because I asked for basic trust before marriage.”

Carly gave a small dry laugh and set the microphone back into its stand.

Basic trust.

That was what he called trying to slide a joint account form under her hand the night before the wedding, with her grandmother’s inheritance sitting behind it like an unlocked door.

Dad cleared his throat loudly, stepping toward the stage. “Everyone, please remain calm. This is a private family matter.”

Mrs. Roth stood from the second row.

“No,” she said. “It became public when she needed a microphone to cancel her own wedding.”

A few guests turned. Someone near the aisle muttered, “Good for her.”

Ethan heard it. His face tightened.

Then the venue coordinator appeared from behind the floral arch.

She was a small woman in a black pantsuit with a clipboard pressed to her chest. Her name tag read Melissa. I remembered seeing her earlier near the catering tent, moving fast, calm, invisible.

“Mr. Jensen?” she asked.

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