“You’re not coming to the wedding,” Mom texted coldly. “This family doesn’t want you there. You make us look low-class just by being there,” Dad added.
I smiled and texted back:
“So you’re choosing status over blood?”
Then I canceled everything — including their venue deposit. What I did next… no one could believe. My name is Wendy Morgan, and twelve days before my sister’s wedding, my mom texted me one sentence that made me very, very calm.
The sentence was this:
“You’re not coming to the wedding. This family doesn’t want you there.”
Then, three seconds later, my dad added his contribution:
“You make us look low-class just by being there.”
I was sitting at my desk at the time. My assistant Hannah was sitting four feet away.
The leather binder for my sister’s wedding was open in front of me. Eight months of work. $26,000 of my own money.
Every single vendor contract signed in my own name with the same Mont Blanc fountain pen Vivien had given me for my 30th birthday. I read the texts twice. I smiled, and I texted my mother back four words.
“So, you’re choosing status over blood?”
Then I picked up my office phone and made eighteen calls in forty minutes. Because here is the thing my mom forgot when she sat down to type that text. I had paid for the venue.
I had paid for the florist. I had paid for the caterer, the DJ, the photographer, and the cascading wisteria she had specifically requested for the entrance arch. And what I did next in a Holiday Inn ballroom twelve days later, in front of every Ashford?
No one in that family could have planned for it. I own a small event planning company called Westbrook Events. It is named after my middle name because, at twenty years old, when I dropped out of Cal State Sacramento, my father told me I would never have anything to put my last name on.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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