Bride Tried to Humiliate Quiet Cousin With Ave Maria at Her Wedding-Ginny

“She can’t sing Ave Maria,” Mara whispered, but the microphone caught every word.

For one strange second, the entire ballroom seemed to stop moving at once.

The chandeliers still burned above us, bright and cold, but the room beneath them had gone airless.

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Forks hung over plates of sea bass.

Champagne bubbles climbed inside crystal flutes as if they were the only things in that room brave enough to keep moving.

The band froze halfway between songs, a violinist’s bow still raised, the drummer’s hand hovering above the snare, the pianist staring at the keys as though they had suddenly become dangerous.

Then Mara realized what the microphone had done.

Her eyes widened first.

Only for a heartbeat.

Then they narrowed with panic, and the beautiful bride standing under the floral arch understood that her private cruelty had just become public record.

Two hundred people heard her.

Two hundred people understood.

And two hundred people waited to see whether I would break.

My name is Lena, though Mara had spent most of the evening saying it like an inconvenience.

At her wedding reception, beneath garlands of white roses and strings of crystal light, I was not the singer, not the guest of honor, not the person anyone had come to see.

I was Daniel’s cousin.

The quiet one.

The woman Mara described as working “in production,” always with the same little pause after the word, as if production were not work but a lower species of existence.

She never asked what I produced.

She never asked where I worked.

She never asked why some people in my field had contracts instead of office plaques, stage names instead of business cards, and rehearsal rooms where the walls remembered more truth than any family dinner table.

Mara did not ask questions when she already liked the answer she had invented.

That was part of her gift.

She could turn ignorance into confidence so smoothly people mistook it for elegance.

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