My 15-Year-Old Daughter Refused to Be My Bridesmaid an Hour Before the Wedding — Part 3

I called admissions, verified my identity, and gave Lily’s name.

Marcus stared at me.

“Is there a file for her?” I asked.

A woman paused. “Yes, ma’am. I see an enrollment file for the fall term.”

“I never enrolled her.”

“The application was submitted by someone named Marcus.”

“He isn’t her legal guardian.”

“I understand.”

“Was money paid?”

“Is there a file for her?”

There was another pause. “Yes. A deposit was paid to secure the spot.”

“When was the deposit paid?” I asked, though something in me already knew the answer.

“Six months ago.”

***

Marcus had proposed three months ago.

He had planned to remove my daughter from our home before he ever asked me to marry him.

When I walked back into the hallway, Marcus was still arguing with the officers.

I stopped a few feet away. “You paid the boarding school deposit six months ago. Is that correct, Marcus?”

Marcus had proposed three months ago.

His face changed.

“So?”

“So?” I repeated.

“I was preparing for our future,” he said. “You were too emotional to make the hard decision.”

Marcus pointed toward the bridal suite. “She’s controlled your life for four years, Julia. I was giving us a chance to have a real marriage.”

“A real marriage?”

“Yes! One where your dead husband’s child isn’t in the middle of everything.”

His face changed.

***

I didn’t turn around to see my daughter cry. I wouldn’t let her watch her pain again.

“You planned a family without my daughter in it,” I said.

“I planned a future where you finally moved on, Julia. Where you could let your hair down and laugh again.”

“No,” I said. “You planned a future where I was easier to control.”

His face hardened. “You’ll regret this.”

The venue manager looked at the officers. “He needs to leave now.”

As they walked him toward the exit, Marcus called back, “You’re throwing away your chance at happiness.”

“You’ll regret this.”

I looked at Lily, shaking in my sister’s arms.

“No,” I said. “I just found it.”

***

After Marcus left, the venue went still.

Guests hovered near the ceremony space, unsure whether to leave.

I asked Janine to stay with Lily, then walked to the front of the room in my wedding dress and picked up the microphone.

“There will be no wedding today,” I said.

A few people gasped. Most already knew.

“There will be no wedding today.”

“I brought you here because I thought I was starting a new family,” I continued. “But I will never build a life with a man who believes my daughter can be removed from it. So today, I’m not becoming Marcus’s wife. I’m staying what I’ve always been first.”

I looked at Lily.

“Her mother.”

Janine cried first. Then Lily did.

I handed back the microphone and went straight to Lily.

She met me halfway, still wrapped in Janine’s arms.

“I’m not becoming Marcus’s wife.”

“I’m sorry,” she whispered into my dress.

I held her face. “Don’t ever apologize for telling me the truth.”

“But I ruined your wedding.”

“No,” I said. “You stopped me from marrying a man who wanted to vote you out of our family.”

Janine sniffed. “And for the record, no man alive is worth wasting buttercream. Let’s eat some cake!”

Lily gave a tiny laugh.

“I ruined your wedding.”

***

That night, we didn’t go on a honeymoon. We went home with three boxes of wedding cake.

“Are you mad at me?” she asked.

I reached across the table. “I’m mad I didn’t see it sooner.”

“He was nice when you were watching.”

“I know.”

“He made me feel like if I told you, I’d be stealing your happiness.”

I squeezed her hand. “You aren’t something I have to choose around, Lily. You are my entire life.”

“I’m mad I didn’t see it sooner.”

***

The next morning, I changed the locks and called the boarding school.

“Marcus has no legal right to enroll my daughter,” I told admissions. “Mark her file as unauthorized and remove her from consideration today.”

***

Three months later, Lily wore the sage-green dress to her debate finals.

When they announced her as the winner, she found me in the crowd and mouthed, “We did it.”

Yes, we did.

Marcus thought there was no room for Lily in my new life.

He was wrong. There had never been room for him in ours.

“We did it.”

✅ End of story — Part 3 of 3 ← Read from Part 1

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