She was already walking toward me, bouquet gone now, champagne in one hand, veil drifting behind her like a banner. Guests nearby stepped back instinctively, sensing conflict and making space for it the way people always do when they want the view.
“You actually came,” she said.
Her smile was gone.
I could feel the room noticing.
I said nothing.
Her eyes swept over me from head to toe. My dress. My shoes. My face. She was assessing, as she always had, for weakness she could use. What she found instead must have irritated her, because her expression sharpened.
“Look at you,” she said softly enough that only the closest guests heard. “Still lurking at the edges.”
I met her gaze and let the silence sit.
She took another step.
“What did you think this was?” she asked. “A charity invitation? Did you come hoping someone would mistake you for family?”
A few people near the bar laughed, politely at first, following her cue.
I should tell you that humiliation has a smell.
It smells like expensive perfume turning sour in your nose. Like candle wax and champagne and the heat rising too fast under your skin. It sounds like other people enjoying the version of you someone else has made available to them.