Not gently. Not privately. In front of two hundred guests, with cameras still recording and celebration waiting outside.
“Leave, Mom,” Ethan said sharply, his face flushed under the stained-glass light.
“Claire doesn’t want you here.”
A ripple moved through the crowd—shock mixed with curiosity. People are always drawn to moments like this when it’s not their own life falling apart.
I looked at my only child, standing beside his bride like he was defending something precious. Claire didn’t even try to hide her satisfaction.
Her hand rested lightly on his arm, her smile small and cutting.
“Ethan,” I said quietly.
“No.” He cut me off. “You always make things about you. Today isn’t about you.
Just go.”
My hands trembled behind my back, hidden in my navy dress. I had worn the pearls his father gave me before he passed. I had baked for the rehearsal dinner because Claire said catered food felt “too impersonal.” I had even covered the cost of the flowers when Ethan said money was tight.
And now he looked at me like I didn’t belong.
“Congratulations,” I said.
I walked out without crying.
That, more than anything, seemed to disappoint them.
Outside, the cold Wyoming wind hit hard. Beyond the parking lot stretched the land leading to Horizon Ranch—my ranch, though Ethan had started calling it “ours” after Claire entered his life.
I sat in my truck for a long moment, staring back at the church.
I remembered Ethan as a child, running through the fields. As a teenager, promising he would never sell his father’s land.
And just weeks ago, asking why I kept certain documents locked away.
Now I understood why.
The next morning, he called.
“Mom, I need the ranch keys,” he said casually. “Claire and I are going there for photos. Her dad wants to take a look at the property.”
No apology.
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