The champagne flute slipped from my fingers and shattered on the marble floor.
Pink bubbles sprayed across my pale dress, staining it like a fresh wound. For a moment, the grand ballroom of the Franklin Plaza fell silent.
And there she was, Ava, my fiancé’s cousin’s wife. smirking like the villain who knows the ending. She had just called me a “nobody,” claiming I had “snared Jackson” into marrying me.
And when he arrived, her world would tilt.
My name is Claire. I teach literature at a public high school in Chicago. My life is ordinary, modest. My biggest luxury is an occasional croissant and latte from the bakery down the street.
Then I met Jackson.
We crossed paths at a community art class where I volunteered. He was there sketching quietly, observing more than speaking. One rainy night, he offered to walk me home when the buses were delayed. That evening, we shared an umbrella and easy conversation.
Three months later, he proposed under a streetlamp near that same bakery—no diamonds, just a simple ring and an even simpler promise: “I’ll choose you, every day.”
Whenever I asked about his family, Jackson would just say, “They’re complicated. Distance is safer.” I never pressed.
We built a small life filled with homemade pasta dinners, thrift store dates, and laughter echoing off our cramped apartment walls. He never made me feel I had to be anything other than myself.
Then one morning, he handed me an ivory envelope.
“My cousin Natalie is getting married,” he said softly. “She wants us there. It’s at The Sterling, in New York.”
The Sterling. The name alone made my throat tighten. That place was where senators threw galas, where celebrities posted photos under chandeliers. I tried to swallow my fear.
When we arrived, every guest looked like they’d stepped out of Vogue. My vintage blue dress suddenly felt… wrong.
We hadn’t even reached our table when Ava appeared sleek black gown, lips painted with venom.
“Jackson,” she purred, kissing his cheek before turning her icy stare on me. “And this is Claire? How… quaint.”
Before I could answer, she slipped her arm through his and dragged him away, leaving me stranded amid strangers.
All night, Ava made sure I stayed invisible. She placed me with distant relatives who barely acknowledged my presence. Her words dripped with condescension.
“Claire teaches high school,” she announced at one point, tilting her glass. “Isn’t that adorable?”
She clinked her glass, smiling like a predator. “To Jackson,” she said sweetly. “Always so… charitable. Even his choice of bride shows his heart—taking in someone from such a simple background. Who knew pity could turn into love?”
Laughter rippled around her table. My face burned.
And then, for the finale, she tipped her glass and “accidentally” hurled it toward me. Pink champagne splattered across my dress.
Ava smirked. “Oh dear. Hope you’re used to cleaning up messes, teacher.”
I stood tall, even as my hands trembled. “You’re right,” I said quietly. “I don’t fit in here. I fit with people who know decency.”
Someone whispered Jackson had stepped out earlier. My heart sank. He wouldn’t even see this.
I turned to leave. And then the ballroom doors slammed open.
Jackson strode in, flanked by two men in immaculate suits. His eyes scanned the crowd until they found me—saw the stains on my dress.
The gentle artist I knew was gone. In his place stood someone commanding, almost fearsome.
He walked straight to me. “Claire. Who did this?”
Ava stepped forward too quickly. “Jackson, don’t be dramatic. We were…”
“Was this you?” His voice was calm, but cold enough to slice glass.
“She doesn’t belong….”
“She belongs with me,” he said sharply. “That’s all that matters.”
Then he turned to the crowd, his tone shifting. “Since introductions here have been… lacking, allow me to correct that. I’m Jackson Reid, CEO of Reid International.”
A hush fell. Someone gasped.
“Yes,” he continued. “This hotel and dozens more are under my company’s name. I chose to keep my identity quiet because I wanted a life without gold-diggers and sycophants. But tonight, someone tried to break the woman I love. That won’t stand.”
He nodded to his associate, who handed him a folder. “Ava,” he said, voice like iron, “while you mocked my wife, you’ve been living in the Manhattan condo I own, driving a car registered to my company, and quietly siphoning funds from the family investment account. Twenty-eight thousand dollars, to be exact.”
Her husband stammered, “Jackson, we can expl…”
“No need,” Jackson snapped. “The investigation is complete. You have thirty days to vacate, and the embezzlement report will reach the authorities if you ever speak against Claire again.”
He turned to me, his expression softening. “I’m sorry I wasn’t here sooner.”
The crowd parted as we walked out, not with pity—but with admiration.
Three months later, we moved into a warm home—not extravagant, just ours. Together, we launched the Claire Reid Foundation to support underprivileged students.
I still teach twice a week. Jackson still sketches when no one’s watching.
Ava? Last I heard, she’s working retail in another city.
I walked into that wedding feeling like a nobody. I walked out knowing love had made me the richest woman alive.
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