She Asked a Stranger for a Kiss, Then Her Fiancé Went Pale at the Gala-yumihong

Emily Parker did not plan to beg a stranger to kiss her at a charity gala.

She had planned for flowers.

She had planned for lighting.

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She had planned for a smooth donor check-in table, polished silver trays, and a speech her fiancé would deliver with that effortless confidence people mistook for character.

The hotel ballroom smelled like roses, champagne, and the lemon polish the staff had rubbed into the marble banisters that afternoon.

The air was cold enough to raise goose bumps along her bare arms, and every time the string quartet began a new song, the bowstrings made the room feel calmer than it deserved to be.

Emily had built the Parker-Reed Foundation Gala from the ground up.

She had called vendors during lunch breaks.

She had sat cross-legged on the apartment floor with menu printouts spread around her.

She had rewritten Michael Reed’s speech twice, because Michael liked to say he was “better off the cuff,” which usually meant he wanted someone else to do the careful work and let him take credit at the microphone.

She had done it anyway.

That was the way love had worked for her for too long.

She made things easier, and Michael made that look natural.

By 4:15 p.m., she had approved the final printed program.

By 6:30 p.m., she had checked the seating chart against the donor list.

By 7:12 p.m., she had fixed the name cards at the table near the flower arch because Michael’s biggest investor had changed his guest at the last second.

By 7:42 p.m., she learned that the man she planned to marry was kissing her younger sister in the service corridor behind the kitchen.

At first, her mind refused to name what she was seeing.

Sarah’s back was against the wall.

Michael’s hand was in Sarah’s hair.

Sarah was laughing softly into his mouth like this was not the night Emily had organized, not the foundation Emily had built, not the family Emily had spent years trying to keep from cracking.

Emily stood behind the half-open service door with a clipboard in her hand.

A hotel worker came up behind her carrying a tray of coffee cups and stopped when he saw her face.

“Ma’am?” he whispered.

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