The groom turned to his bride.
“What did you do?”
Her bouquet slipped from her hands.
“It’s not what it sounds like.”
The beggar woman gripped the stone railing, tears filling her eyes.
“I wrote to you every year,” she whispered. “They all came back unopened.”
The groom’s breathing turned sharp.
“No. My father said you died.”
The woman shook her head.
“Your father sent me away when I refused to sign over your grandfather’s house. Then she found me years later and promised I could see you today.”
The bride stepped back, trembling.
“I was protecting our future.”
The groom looked at her like he no longer knew her.
“You buried my mother while she was still alive.”
The guests fell silent.
The best man lowered his head.
The groom walked down the steps slowly, every eye following him.
The beggar woman tried to wipe her face with her sleeve.
“I know I don’t look like a mother you’d want at your wedding,” she cried.
He stopped in front of her.
Then he took off his tuxedo jacket and wrapped it around her shoulders.
“I wanted you every day,” he whispered.
She broke instantly.
“My boy.”
He pulled her into his arms, holding her as if all the years between them had finally cracked open.
The bride sobbed behind him.
“Please, don’t do this.”
The groom turned, still holding his mother’s hand.
“You already did.”
Then he looked at the guests.
“There will be no wedding.”
His mother squeezed his fingers.
And as the church bells rang over the ruined flowers and stunned crowd, the groom walked away from the bride who lied—
and left with the mother who had spent her whole life trying to come home.