The slap rang through the wedding hall louder than the music.
For one horrifying second, two hundred guests froze and stared at me like I was the embarrassment ruining my daughter’s perfect day.
My knees buckled.
My hand crashed against the gift table to keep myself upright. Champagne glasses rattled. Someone gasped near the dance floor.
And standing over me in his white tuxedo was my brand-new son-in-law, Carter Whitmore, smiling like a man who already owned everything I had spent my entire life protecting.
“Don’t make a scene, Helen,” he said smoothly, loud enough for nearby tables to hear. “Just hand over the farm keys.”
Beside him stood my daughter, Emily.
My baby girl.
Her face looked pale beneath her bridal makeup, her fingers trembling around her bouquet.
“Mom,” she whispered shakily, “please… just give him the keys.”
That hurt far worse than the slap.
The farm had belonged to my family for four generations.
Forty acres of apple orchards, cornfields, horse pasture, and the white farmhouse my late husband, Thomas, rebuilt board by board after the tornado twenty years earlier.
Carter used to call it “worthless dirt.”
Until the county announced plans for a new highway extension nearby.
Suddenly, that “worthless dirt” became prime development land worth millions.
Carter’s mother, Vanessa Whitmore, lifted her champagne glass with a thin smile.
“This drama is exhausting, Helen. You’re sixty-two years old and living alone. How much longer do you honestly think you can manage that place?”
A few guests laughed quietly.
Alone.
That was what they thought I was.