Her Father Shoved Her Into The Wedding Fountain. Then Her Husband Walked In-thuyhien

The water hit Emily’s face so cold that the whole ballroom seemed to vanish.

For one second, there was no music.

No clinking glasses.

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No polite wedding laughter.

There was only the slap of the fountain, the sharp smell of chlorine, and the heavy pull of her emerald dress dragging against her knees while she tried to get upright without showing the room how badly her hands were shaking.

Her father stood above her in his dark suit.

Michael’s hands were still lifted from the shove.

And he was laughing.

A few guests laughed with him because some people will follow the loudest person in a room before they decide whether he is right.

A few guests froze.

A few lifted their phones.

Emily had spent thirty-two years learning the shape of her family’s cruelty, but knowing a person can hurt you is not the same as feeling their hands push you backward into water in front of a wedding crowd.

She pushed wet hair away from her eyes.

Her mother, Sarah, stood near the terrace doors with one hand over her mouth.

Not crying.

Covering.

Olivia, the bride, held her bouquet low against her white gown and did not move.

Daniel, her new husband, looked from Michael to Emily with the stunned face of a man watching a family tradition reveal itself too late.

Michael looked around the terrace, taking in the attention.

“Come on,” he said. “Don’t make that face. It was a joke.”

A joke.

Emily put one hand on the stone rim of the fountain.

The water had made her dress heavy, and her shoes slipped once against the marble.

She caught herself.

That small recovery mattered more than anyone in the room knew.

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