“I Funded My Granddaughter’s Dream Wedding, But I Wasn’t Even Allowed Inside.”

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PART 3

At the very top was the name of my lawyer.

Martin Hayes & Associates.

His first reaction wasn’t fear.

It wasn’t guilt.

It was anger.

“Mom.”

He spoke my name aloud, even though I wasn’t there.

As though saying it somehow made everything feel less real.

He ripped the envelope open.

The first sheet was an official notice.

His eyes skimmed over it quickly.

Then they slowed.

Then they froze.

Because the words he expected to find never appeared.

There were no accusations.

No emotional outbursts.

No dramatic claims about betrayal.

Only facts.

Dates.

Dollar amounts.

Signed agreements.

The truth.

The letter opened with:

Mr. Richard Parker,

This letter serves as formal documentation of the financial contributions provided by Mrs. Eleanor Parker for the Green Valley Estate wedding held on Saturday.

Mrs. Parker covered 100% of the costs for the venue, floral services, upgraded catering, lighting, entertainment, and all related wedding expenses.

At no time was Mrs. Parker advised that she would be refused entry to the event she fully financed.

Richard stopped reading.

A knot formed in his stomach.

He glanced toward the living room.

Susan sat on the couch, casually scrolling through the wedding pictures.

She looked content.

Almost pleased.

“Richard?”

He didn’t respond.

“What is it?”

He slowly looked up.

“Did you know?”

Susan’s smile faded.

“Know what?”

“That Mom wasn’t even on the guest list.”

Silence.

Not confusion.

Not shock.

Silence.

That alone gave him his answer.

Susan gently set her phone aside.

“Richard…”

“No.”

His voice stayed low.

“Don’t explain yet.”

She looked down.

“I thought it had already been taken care of.”

“Taken care of?”

He let out a short laugh.

It sounded empty.

“My mother paid for the entire wedding.”

Susan folded her arms.

“And?”

“And she wasn’t invited.”

“Richard, we’ve already talked about this.”

“No, you talked about it.”

He looked directly at her.

“I only stayed quiet.”

Those words hit him hard because they were true.

For years, Richard had told himself he wasn’t taking anyone’s side.

He believed he was simply keeping the peace.

But now he was forced to face an uncomfortable truth.

Failing to stand by his mother had been a choice all along.

The following page included copies of every contract.

The venue.

The florist.

The caterer.

The wedding planner.

Every agreement listed the same responsible person.

Eleanor Parker.

His mother’s name.

Not his.

Not Susan’s.

Not even Clara’s.

His daughter’s wedding had only happened because his mother quietly made it possible.

Yet they had left her standing outside like she didn’t belong.

Then his eyes landed on the final document.

It wasn’t about money.

It was about responsibility.

Richard frowned.

“What’s this?”

Susan suddenly looked uneasy.

“What?”

He read the letter out loud.

“Mrs. Parker hereby requests the immediate removal of her name from all event-related obligations and authorizations…”

He paused, confused.

Then kept reading.

“…including any future liability, vendor disputes, payment responsibilities, or contractual obligations connected to the wedding celebration.”

His breathing became slower.

Because he finally understood.

His mother wasn’t trying to undo the wedding.

She was removing herself from it.

Entirely.

“Wait.”

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