The Wedding Piano Performance That Exposed the Bride’s Secret-Tien3004

Grace looked like the kind of bride people trusted on sight.

That was part of her talent.

She stood in the center of the ballroom under three chandeliers, wrapped in ivory satin and pearls, smiling at every guest like she had personally forgiven them for being ordinary.

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The air smelled like white roses, lemon cleaner, hairspray, champagne, and the faint heat of too many bodies in one expensive room.

Behind the bar, crystal glasses kept chiming softly as servers finished lining up drinks for cocktail hour.

At the sound table, one of the technicians tapped a microphone with two fingers.

Thump.

Thump.

Thump.

Every little sound came through the speakers and disappeared into the high ceiling.

I was behind the bar checking the event binder, because that was what I did at weddings.

I made other people’s perfect nights happen.

My name is Emily Johnson, and I had worked at that wedding hall for nearly twelve years.

I knew which outlet killed the uplights on the north wall.

I knew which corner of the ballroom carpet could catch a thin heel.

I knew the catering door squeaked unless you leaned into it with your shoulder.

I knew Mr. Collins would pretend not to be nervous by straightening his tie every ten minutes.

I knew where the extra table numbers were stored, where the emergency sewing kit lived, and which speaker always buzzed if the cable was not taped down right.

The place was not glamorous to me.

It was work.

It was rent.

It was the building where I had become useful enough that nobody had to wonder if I was okay.

That was easier for everyone.

Especially my family.

Jack, my brother, was the reason I had stayed useful for so long.

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