I discovered my sister was having dinner with my fiancé—“she wore my engagement dress. at our restaurant.”—so I booked… the table right beside theirs.
My sister was wearing my engagement dress.
Inside my restaurant. Sitting across from my fiancé.
For three long seconds, I stood outside the private dining room and watched candlelight slide across the silk I had picked for my rehearsal dinner. The ivory gown fit Clara almost perfectly, except at the shoulders, where it pulled tight like the truth trying to break free.
Evan reached across the table and touched her hand.
“Relax,” he said, offering that soft, practiced smile I once believed belonged to me. “Maya won’t know.”
Clara laughed into her glass. “Maya never knows anything until someone explains it slowly.”
My grip tightened around my phone. The maître d’, Daniel, stood beside me, pale with anger.
“Ms. Vale,” he whispered, “I can have them removed.”
“No.” My voice came out steady, even to me. “Reserve the table right next to theirs.”
Daniel blinked. “Right next to—”
“Yes. And bring the best champagne.”
He understood then. Everyone at Aurelia understood something Evan and Clara had forgotten: this wasn’t just my favorite restaurant. It was mine. Built from my grandmother’s recipes, my late father’s insurance money, and four years of my life. Evan liked to say he “helped launch it” because he once chose a font for the menu.
I walked into the dining room.
Clara saw me first. Her expression cracked, then hardened into a polished mask. Evan followed her gaze and froze, his wineglass suspended midair.
I smiled.
“Funny,” I said, settling at the table beside them. “I was told this room was booked for a business dinner.”
Evan recovered quickly. “Maya. This isn’t what it looks like.”
“It looks like my sister is wearing the dress I bought, sitting with my fiancé, in the restaurant I own.”
Clara lifted her chin. “You always loved drama.”
“And you always loved taking things you couldn’t afford.”
Her eyes flashed.
Evan leaned closer, lowering his voice. “Let’s not make a scene.”
I poured champagne slowly, watching the bubbles rise.
“Oh, Evan,” I said. “The scene started before I arrived.”
His smile faltered.