He Banned His Mother From His Wedding. Her Lawyer Ruined His Vows-thuyhien

The lobby outside the wedding ballroom smelled like white roses, polished marble, and money trying very hard to look effortless.

Clara stood beside the reception table in a pale blue dress she had saved four months to buy.

The air-conditioning blew cold against her arms.

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Beyond the double doors, a string quartet played something soft enough to make strangers believe the day was tender.

She had imagined this moment differently.

She had imagined Ethan seeing her, stopping for half a second, and smiling like the boy who used to run across the kitchen in socks because he wanted her to see his report card.

She had imagined him saying, “Mom, you look beautiful.”

Instead, the young woman at the reception table looked down at the guest list for the third time.

Her finger moved slowly along the rows of names.

Then it stopped.

“I’m sorry, ma’am,” she said quietly. “Your name isn’t here.”

Clara gave a small laugh because that was what people did when a mistake was too painful to be real.

“Could you check again?” she asked.

The young woman checked again.

Behind Clara, guests passed with envelopes, champagne flutes, and careful smiles.

A groomsman glanced over, looked away, and pretended to study the ceiling.

Mothers are not forgotten from their sons’ weddings.

That was what Clara told herself in the few seconds before Ethan appeared.

He looked handsome in his tuxedo.

That hurt first.

He looked like the man she had prayed over, fed, dressed, driven, defended, and carried through every small disaster of childhood.

Then he looked at her face.

Then at her dress.

Then at the reception table.

And his expression did not change into concern.

It changed into irritation.

“Mom,” he said. “What are you doing here?”

“I came to your wedding,” Clara said, still trying to keep her voice low. “There must be a mistake.”

“It’s not a mistake.”

The receptionist lowered her eyes.

Clara felt the blue dress brush against her knees.

She suddenly remembered standing in the department store dressing room, turning once in the mirror, telling herself Ethan would like the color.

“Ethan,” she said. “I’m your mother.”

He sighed.

That sigh did more damage than the sentence that came after it.

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