No man in your family had ever spoken about your son that way.
Isabella reached for the microphone. “Julian, stop. You’re embarrassing me.”
He stepped back.
“No, Isabella. You embarrassed yourself.”
Your sister’s perfect bridal mask cracked.
“Are you seriously defending her? On our wedding day?”
Julian looked at her for a long moment.
Then he said the words that split the night open.
“There is no wedding day anymore.”
Isabella blinked. “What?”
He turned toward the officiant, still standing awkwardly near the white floral arch.
“Do not file the license.”
The officiant’s eyes widened.
Isabella grabbed his arm. “You can’t do that.”
He gently removed her hand.
“I can. And I am.”
Whispers exploded across the ballroom.
Your mother hurried forward. “Julian, you’re upset. Weddings are emotional. Isabella made a mistake.”
Julian looked at her with a controlled disgust that made even the guests nearest him step back.
“No,” he said. “A mistake is spilling champagne. A mistake is forgetting a toast. What happened here was cruelty with a microphone.”
Isabella’s eyes filled with tears, but they were angry tears. Not sorry ones.
“You’re ruining my life over Elena?”
Julian looked at you again.
You wished he wouldn’t.
Not because you were ashamed of him seeing you, but because you were ashamed of the room. Ashamed that your son had been turned into a public wound. Ashamed that strangers now knew exactly what your family thought of you.
But Julian’s face held no pity.
Only respect.
“I’m ending this because you showed me who you are,” he said. “And because a child asked his mother why people were laughing at her.”
That sentence changed the room.
Guests looked down. A woman near table 11 covered her mouth. Someone by the bar muttered, “God.”
Your mother pointed at you. “This is your fault.”
You almost laughed.