Madison’s face reddened.
“You always do this.”
I blinked.
“What?”
“You always ruin everything.”
The words hit harder than they should have.
Because part of me knew she meant them.
Not the wine.
Not the dress.
My existence.
My father suddenly appeared beside her.
“What happened?”
Madison pointed.
“They ruined my dress.”
My father didn’t ask questions.
Didn’t look at the stain.
Didn’t ask if Emma was okay.
Instead, he looked directly at me.
“I knew inviting you was a mistake.”
My chest tightened.
“Don’t do this.”
“The mistake,” he said coldly, “was allowing you through the gate.”
Emma squeezed me tighter.
I felt something inside me begin to break.
“Don’t talk about my daughter like that.”
“Your daughter?”
He laughed.
“She’s part of the problem.”
Something in me snapped.
“Don’t.”
The word came out sharper than I intended.
My father stepped closer.
His face darkened.
For a second, I genuinely thought he might hit me.
Instead, he shoved me.
Hard.
Everything happened instantly.
I lost my balance.
Emma screamed.
The edge of my heel slipped against wet stone.
And suddenly we were falling backward into the decorative fountain behind us.
The water swallowed us whole.
Cold.
Violent.
Shocking.
Emma cried out.
I surfaced immediately, pulling her into my arms.
Water streamed from my hair.
My dress clung to my body.
Emma was sobbing.
And then I heard it.
Laughter.
Actual laughter.
Guests were laughing.
Some were recording.
Others were applauding.
As though a mother and child being thrown into a fountain was entertainment.
Then Ethan Caldwell stepped forward.
Madison’s new husband.
The celebrated groom.
The successful businessman.
He raised his champagne glass.
Smiled.
And said loudly:
“This is exactly why some people don’t belong at events like this.”
More laughter.
More whispers.
More phones recording.
I looked around at all of them.
My family.
Their friends.
The guests.
Every person who stood there doing nothing.
Then I looked at Ethan.
And for the first time all evening, I smiled.