Daniel could barely hold the phone.
The guests behind him started whispering, but all he heard was his own breathing and his mother’s quiet sobs.
He looked at Isabelle.
“Tell me that video is fake.”
Her bouquet shook in her hands.
“Daniel, I was protecting us.”
“From my mother?”
Isabelle’s eyes filled with panic. “She would have destroyed everything. Your father left conditions in the estate. If you reunited with her before the wedding, she could challenge the inheritance.”
Daniel stared at her as though the woman in the white dress had become a stranger.
His mother slowly opened her worn handbag and took out a small blue sweater, carefully folded despite its age.
Daniel recognized the stitched letter on the chest.
A crooked little D.
His hands began to tremble.
“You made that,” he whispered.
She nodded, tears falling freely now.
“I held it every birthday,” she said. “I came to your school once. Your father had security remove me before you saw me.”
Daniel’s breath broke.
“All these years… I thought you left.”
“I wrote to you,” she cried softly. “Every month. He sent every letter back unopened.”
Isabelle reached for Daniel’s arm.
“Please. We can talk about this after the ceremony.”
He pulled away from her touch.
“After I marry the woman who paid my mother to stay homeless?”
The words silenced the entire staircase.
His mother lowered her eyes in shame. “I didn’t want money. I only wanted to see you before it was too late.”
Daniel stepped down toward her.
For a moment, neither of them moved.
Then she lifted one shaking hand and touched his cheek exactly the way she had when he was small.
Daniel collapsed into her arms.
She held him with a desperate strength, crying into the shoulder of the son she had lost for twenty-five years.
Behind them, Isabelle’s bouquet slipped from her hand and scattered across the stone steps.
Daniel finally turned back to her, his eyes wet and steady.
“There will be no wedding.”
Isabelle shook her head. “Daniel, don’t do this.”
He took off his ring and placed it on the crushed white flowers at her feet.
“You were worried my mother would take my inheritance,” he said. “But she’s the only person here who never wanted anything except me.”
Then he took his mother’s hand and walked past the shocked guests, leaving the bride alone on the church steps in the dress she would never be married in.