Downstairs, the twins waited by the door, polished shoes tapping the floor in uneven rhythm.
When she stepped into the foyer, they both looked up. Their smiles were small, but full. Kevin held out a tiny flower pulled from the garden that morning.
Jon held the card. The same one, still folded, still creased. “You look like a memory,” Jon said quietly. Evelyn blinked. She didn’t ask what he meant.
She didn’t have to.
The driver opened the door without comment. They rode in silence, not heavy silence, the kind that holds something sacred.
At St. Edmunds, the reception hall buzzed with light chatter. Linen tablecloths, paper crafts, mums in heels, and soft perfume.
The room was warm but tight, every seat claimed, every glance loaded with unspoken comparisons.
When Evelyn stepped in hand in hand with the twins, the room noticed, not with shouting, but with stillness. Some eyes turned, some lips pressed together, others just stared.
She felt it. Not in her skin, but in her breath.
But she didn’t stop walking. Neither did they. The teacher smiled warmly. Kevin, John, we’re so happy to have your guest.
Guest? Not mother. Not mistake. Guest. It was enough.
They found their table. The boys climbed into their seats, placing the card carefully in the center. Evelyn smoothed her dress, sat down, folded her hands.
She could feel it again. The weight of being seen in a room where she was never meant to belong, not by title, not by dress code, not by the invisible lines that divide people like her from people like them.
And then the door opened. Jonathan stepped in. not rushed, not late, just unannounced.
He hadn’t said he was coming, not to her, not to the boys. He wore a dark suit, tie slightly a skew, eyes already scanning the room before the door had even closed behind him.
And when he saw them, the twins and Evelyn at the far table, he stopped midstep. Everything slowed.
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