For a brief second all I saw was light—gold light from the chandeliers, silver light from the mirrored wall behind the bar, the glitter of five hundred glasses raised in celebration. My cheek burned. The skin just below my eye throbbed in a hot, immediate pulse. Somewhere a woman gasped. Somewhere else someone laughed.
Then the laughter spread.
Not everyone laughed. That would be too easy, too cartoonishly cruel. But enough people did. Enough people smiled behind their drinks or leaned toward one another with delighted, hungry expressions, the kind guests wear when a wedding suddenly turns into better entertainment than the band. The hall, which a moment earlier had been full of music and candlelight and polished speeches and expensive perfume, sharpened into something mean.
My stepsister stood in front of me with her hand still half raised, as if even she was startled by how good it had felt to humiliate me in public.
“You don’t belong here,” she said.
Her voice carried.
It always had.
Some people are born with soft voices and some cultivate them because softness makes other people come closer. Bianca had never needed either. She had a voice designed for rooms to rearrange themselves around it. At thirteen, she could cry on command. At seventeen, she could make adults believe nearly anything if she widened her eyes at the right moment. At thirty, standing in a gown that probably cost more than my first apartment’s annual rent, she still had the same gift she’d had all her life: the ability to turn her own ugliness into someone else’s shame.
I did not touch my face.
I did not step back.
I did not say a word.
That was the part she hated most.
If I had shouted, she would have known the script. If I had cried, she would have won in a way she understood. But silence has a way of exposing the naked shape of a thing, and Bianca had always despised being seen clearly.
Around us, the ballroom had begun to slow. Conversations stumbled. Heads turned. The string quartet at the far side of the room faltered into an awkward half-finished phrase and then stopped entirely. Somewhere near the dance floor, a waiter lowered a tray because even hired staff know when they are suddenly standing inside a story they’ll tell later.
Bianca took one more step closer.