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The Grand Aurora Hotel in downtown Minneapolis shimmered like a royal palace that night.
Crystal chandeliers bathed the marble floors in golden light. A string quartet played softly beside a wall overflowing with roses. Hundreds of guests filled the ballroom, draped in silk gowns and tailored suits, sipping champagne and trading hushed gossip. Every detail had been curated for months—from the gold-edged chairs to the towering cathedral-shaped wedding cake.
My name is Brandon Cole. I was meant to be the groom everyone envied, standing in a black tuxedo beside the woman the world believed I loved. Melissa Davenport—heiress to the powerful Davenport family, a name synonymous with wealth, finance, and real estate across the Midwest. Their influence was legendary. Their arrogance, even more so.
Yet beneath the elegance, my chest felt heavy. Not because of the marriage itself—I cared for Melissa, or at least believed I did—but because I knew how her family looked at my father.
Most guests barely noticed him. Some assumed he was a distant relative. Others thought he was staff who’d wandered into the wrong room. No one asked. No one understood the sacrifices hidden behind that quiet posture.
I grew up in a cramped apartment above a bakery. My father worked nonstop—fixing cars, delivering packages, washing dishes at night. He never complained. Never spoke about his past. When I asked why we had no relatives or visitors, he would smile and say our family was small, but strong.
Melissa’s parents never concealed their contempt. At every dinner, they spoke past him, never to him. They questioned my ambitions, my career, my future—never his. When he tried to speak, they smiled politely and turned away.
The officiant stood ready at the front. Melissa waited near the entrance, radiant beneath the lights. Guests took their seats. The music shifted.
“Before the ceremony begins,” he announced, “we’d like to hear a few words from the bride’s family.”
Richard smiled. “Tonight, we welcome our esteemed guests—partners, investors, and friends who helped build our family legacy.”
Applause followed.
His gaze drifted toward my father.
Polite laughter rippled through the room.
This time, the laughter was strained. My face burned. I looked at my father.
Then Paula delivered the final blow.
“At least Brandon won’t inherit his father’s profession,” she said lightly. “That would be disastrous for our family image.”
Silence.
No laughter. No movement. The insult lingered like poison in the air.
Melissa stood nearby. Instead of defending us, she laughed softly—an awkward, embarrassed laugh. Not shock. Not outrage.
Something inside me snapped.
I stood. The scrape of my chair echoed across the marble floor. Every head turned.
I walked forward and took the microphone from Richard without asking.