She Was Invited to Watch Her Millionaire Ex-Husband Marry Someone Else — But the Moment His Family Saw the Three Boys Beside Her, Everything Changed — Part 2

Calmly.

Because for the first time, she was the one with no script.

The Seat Beside the Kitchen

A young coordinator hurried toward me, pale and nervous.

“Mrs. Whit— I mean, Ms. Reed,” she stammered. “Your table is this way.”

I already knew where they had seated me.

Table 31.

Near the service entrance.

Close enough to hear the staff moving plates.

Far enough from the family tables to remind me that I was not welcome.

Margaret had planned that detail carefully.

But she had not planned for three little boys in tailored suits walking beside me.

As we passed the rows of guests, whispers rose behind gloved hands.

“Are those his children?”

“They look exactly like him.”

“Did Margaret know?”

“Does Julian know?”

Miles squeezed my hand.

“Mommy, why is everyone staring?”

I bent down and adjusted his collar.

“Because you three look very handsome,” I said.

Rowan grinned.

Bennett stayed close to my side.

Then a voice behind me said my name.

Not coldly.

Not proudly.

Shaken.

“Avery?”

I turned.

Julian stood at the end of the aisle in his wedding suit, white flower pinned to his lapel, his face completely still.

For years, I had imagined what this moment might feel like.

Anger.

Victory.

Regret.

But when I saw him looking at our sons, all I felt was the weight of time.

His eyes moved from Miles to Rowan to Bennett.

His lips parted.

“They’re mine,” he said, barely above a whisper.

I did not answer right away.

Then I said, “Yes.”

The Bride Who Saw the Truth First

Serena Caldwell stood a few feet behind him in a fitted ivory gown, her veil resting over one shoulder.

I expected anger from her.

Embarrassment.

Maybe even blame.

Instead, she looked at the boys, then at Julian, and her expression changed slowly from confusion to understanding.

She stepped closer.

“Julian,” she said quietly, “did you know?”

He shook his head.

“No.”

Margaret appeared then, moving fast across the garden, her face tight with panic beneath her perfect makeup.

“This is not the time,” she said sharply. “Avery, whatever you think you are doing, you will not turn this wedding into a spectacle.”

I looked at her.

“I didn’t turn it into anything, Margaret. I simply accepted your invitation.”

Her eyes flashed toward the boys.

“You had no right to hide them from this family.”

My voice stayed calm.

“I had every right to protect them from a family that tried to erase their mother.”

The guests had gone completely silent.

Julian looked at his mother.

For once, he did not defend her.

For once, he looked at her as if he was finally seeing the room clearly.

“Mother,” he said slowly, “did you know she was pregnant?”

Margaret’s mouth tightened.

That tiny pause gave her away.

Julian’s face changed.

“You knew?”

Serena took one step back.

Margaret lifted her chin.

“I suspected. I did what was necessary to protect the family.”

A soft gasp moved through the guests.

I felt Bennett’s small hand slip into mine.

The Letter Margaret Never Expected

I had not come unprepared.

I reached into my clutch and pulled out a folded document.

Not dramatic.

Not loud.

Just paper.

But sometimes paper has more power than shouting.

I handed it to Julian.

“This was sent to me five years ago by your mother’s attorney,” I said. “It warned me that if I brought any claim against the Whitmore family, they would question my character, my stability, and my right to raise any child connected to you.”

Julian stared at the page.

His hands trembled slightly.

Margaret’s face turned pale.

“That was a private matter,” she said.

I looked at her.

“No. That was the reason I left.”

Julian read the letter once.

Then again.

His eyes lifted to mine, filled with something I had once waited years to see.

Regret.

“Avery,” he said softly, “I didn’t know she sent this.”

I believed him.

And that made it worse in a different way.

Because he may not have known about the letter, but he had known enough.

He had known I was being cornered.

He had known I was alone.

And he had still stayed silent.

Continue to Part 3 Part 2 of 3

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