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My brother stood abruptly. “You’re telling us this three months after Mom died. Three months.”
“I know how it sounds,” Dad said quietly. “But life is short. Losing your mother showed me that.”
Instead, I stayed frozen in my seat.
Laura gripped Dad’s hand more tightly. “We love each other. And we’re getting married.”
Later that night, he called me.
“It’s grief,” I replied without thinking. “People do strange things.”
In the weeks that followed, everything moved fast—and quietly. No public announcements. No celebration. Just documents, appointments, and hushed conversations they assumed we couldn’t hear.
Laura made a few attempts to draw me in.
I turned her down every time.
“I’m okay,” I said. “Do whatever you like.”
I paused, then nodded. “If you’re happy, that’s what matters.”
The wedding invitation arrived six weeks later. An intimate ceremony. Immediate family only. I stared at it for a long time. Mom’s name was nowhere to be found—no mention, no acknowledgment of how little time had passed.
Still, I went.
I told myself it was the grown-up thing to do. The loving thing. The daughter thing. On the wedding day, surrounded by smiles, champagne, and gentle music, I kept repeating the same lie in my head.
This is just grief. Just two broken people finding solace.
Then Robert arrived late, eyes frantic, jacket half on. He grabbed my arm.
“Claire. We need to talk. Now.”
Before I could ask what was wrong, he said the words that shattered everything.
“You don’t really know who Dad is.”
He didn’t slow down until we were nearly outside. The music softened behind us. Laughter spilled through the open doors. Someone clinked a glass in celebration. It felt grotesque.
“What’s going on?” I whispered sharply. “You missed the ceremony. You look like you ran here.”
“I almost didn’t come,” he said. His hand trembled when he finally released my arm. “I was told not to.”
“Told by who?”
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