“And Aunt Beatrice.”
“She’s ninety-three.”
“She likes children.”
I looked back at him.
“You actually expect me to spend the evening babysitting?”
He sighed dramatically.
“Jenna, not everyone belongs at the networking tables.”
Networking tables.
He actually called them that.
“This wedding isn’t just about family,” he continued.
“It’s about opportunities.”
My heart sank.
“So I’m bad for business?”
He didn’t answer directly.
“You simply don’t fit the atmosphere.”
I slowly walked toward Table Nineteen.
Every step felt heavier.
The ballroom stretched endlessly before me.
Near the front sat CEOs.
Investors.
Corporate attorneys.
Venture capitalists.
Executives from companies Nicholas desperately wanted to impress.
In the very center sat one name everyone seemed to recognize.
Emmett Stewart.
Founder and CEO of one of the country’s fastest-growing technology companies.
Nicholas idolized him.
For months he had talked about nothing else.
“If I can just make a good impression,” he kept saying.
“One conversation with Emmett could change everything.”
Apparently that conversation was worth humiliating his own sister.
I reached the children’s table.
Four young cousins were already coloring on the tablecloth with washable crayons.
Great-Aunt Beatrice smiled warmly.
“Oh good,” she said.
“I was hoping someone over twelve would sit with me.”
I laughed.
At least someone wanted me there.
As guests continued arriving, I quietly observed the room.
Nicholas floated from table to table introducing himself repeatedly.
His smile grew wider every time he approached someone wealthy.
Meanwhile, I enjoyed talking with the children.
One little girl proudly showed me a drawing she’d made of the wedding cake.
Another asked whether brides always wore uncomfortable shoes.
It turned out to be the most genuine conversation I’d had all afternoon.
Then something unexpected happened.
The ballroom suddenly became quieter.
Heads turned toward the entrance.
Emmett Stewart had arrived.
Tall.
Confident.
Relaxed.
Unlike many executives, he wasn’t surrounded by assistants or security.
He simply walked through the room greeting staff members before greeting executives.
That caught my attention immediately.
He thanked the waiters.
Complimented the florist.
Stopped to speak with the musicians.