Two Girls Crashed His Engagement Dinner With One Word: Dad-myhoa

The champagne was already poured by the time Ethan Ward realized the room had gone too quiet.

Not silent.

Quiet in the expensive way, where people kept smiling because they did not want to be the first to admit something had happened.

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The private dining room at The Glass Room smelled like lemon polish, browned butter, white flowers, and money.

The kind of money that did not announce itself loudly because it expected everyone else to do that work.

A violinist stood near the marble fountain, playing something soft enough to disappear beneath conversation.

Waiters moved between tables with silver domes and folded napkins, careful not to interrupt anyone important.

At the center table, Ethan Ward sat beside Portia Kingsley, his future spread around him like a magazine feature.

Portia’s diamond ring flashed every time she lifted her hand.

Three society bloggers had already photographed it under the chandelier light while pretending to adjust their lipstick, check their messages, or admire the table setting.

Ethan had noticed.

He noticed everything now.

That was one of the things success had done to him.

It had trained him to see cameras before faces.

By 9:00 p.m., he was supposed to stand, lift his glass, and announce to forty of New York’s richest people that he had found the woman who completed his life.

He had rehearsed the words in the car.

He had rehearsed them in the elevator.

He had rehearsed them once more in the restroom mirror while a man from a real estate family pretended not to recognize him at the sink.

He knew exactly when to pause.

Exactly when to look at Portia.

Exactly when to make the room laugh.

Then two little girls walked up to the table in matching lavender dresses.

They were holding hands.

Not skipping.

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