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Chapter Three

Author: Joyce Claire
last update publish date: 2026-06-05 17:24:28

The welcome home dinner was exactly what I expected, which somehow made it worse.

My mother arrived an hour early to "help," which meant she stood in the kitchen and told me everything I was doing wrong while I chopped vegetables and seasoned meat and checked the oven temperature for the tenth time. She didn't lift a finger, of course she never did; but she had plenty of opinions about the salt, the presentation, the timing, and the way I had set the table.

"Elora always preferred the silver forks," she said, rearranging the cutlery I had already arranged. "And the napkins should be folded differently. You know that."

I didn't know that. No one had ever taught me the difference between silver forks and regular ones, because no one had ever cared enough to teach me anything. Elora got lessons in etiquette, piano and French. I got leftover uniforms and hand-me-down shoes and a bedroom facing the wall.

I said nothing. I just watched my mother change my work to suit her favorite daughter, and I felt something harden inside me.

By the time the guests arrived; my father, Nathaniel, and Elora, who had spent the entire afternoon getting ready. The dining table looked like something from a magazine. Crystal glasses, white candles, flowers I had arranged myself. No one complimented them. Elora sat down without looking at me, and Nathaniel pulled out her chair like a reflex.

My father kissed Elora on the forehead. He nodded at me from across the room.

I served the first course in silence.

****

The dinner went on like that for an hour. I brought out plates and refilled glasses and cleared empty dishes, and every time I entered the room the conversation paused just long enough for me to feel unwanted. They talked about Elora's time abroad, about Nathaniel's business, about a vacation the family had taken years ago that I hadn't been invited to. My mother laughed at something Elora said, and my father reached over to squeeze Elora's hand.

I stood by the kitchen door with a serving tray in my hands, watching them, and I realized something I had always known but never accepted: I was not part of this family. I was the substitute, placeholder.and body they had put in the dress when the real bride ran away.

And then Elora looked at me.

"Elena, the wine," she said. No please, not even thank you. 

I walked to the table and poured the red wine into her glass, my hand steady even though my insides were shaking. She smiled up at me, sweet and sharp, and said, "You've always been so good at serving, big sister. It's like you were born for it."

My mother laughed. My father looked down at his plate while Nathaniel said nothing.

I stood there for a second too long, the wine bottle still in my hand, and something inside me, what I had been pushing down for two years, for twenty years finally snapped.

"You want to know why I'm good at serving?" I said, and my voice came out calm and clear, the kind of calm that comes right before a storm. "Because I've been practicing my whole life. While you were in Paris and Milan, Elora, I was here. While you were running away from your own wedding, I was locked in a dressing room with rope burns on my wrists so I could take your place. You think I don't know why you left?"

The table went silent. My mother's smile froze. My father's fork stopped halfway to his mouth.

Elora's eyes narrowed, just a little. "Elena, maybe you should sit down."

"No," I said. "I've been sitting down my whole life. I've been quiet my whole life. I've been the good daughter, the obedient wife, the invisible sister. And you know what? I'm tired."

I set the wine bottle down on the table, right next to Elora's glass, and I looked at Nathaniel. His face was pale, his jaw tight, and I could see something in his eyes; fear, or maybe recognition. He knew what I was about to say.

"Ask her why she really left," I said, nodding toward Elora. "Go ahead. Ask her."

No one spoke. The candles flickered. My mother's hands were shaking.

So I told them.

"The night before the wedding," I said, and my voice didn't waver, "Elora wasn't packing. She was in Nathaniel's bed. In the guest house, where no one would see them. While I was upstairs in my room, sleeping alone, thinking I was about to marry a man who might learn to love me."

My mother gasped. My father dropped his fork.

Elora's face went white, then red, then white again. "That's a lie," she whispered, but her voice cracked.

"Is it?" I turned to Nathaniel. "Tell them I'm lying. Look me in the eye and tell them I'm lying."

He didn't say anything. He just sat there, staring at his plate, and his silence was louder than any denial.

"You see?" I said, looking around the table at my family; my mother, who had never defended me; my father, who had never seen me; my sister, who had taken everything and called it love. "You've been celebrating her return like she's some kind of hero. But she's not a hero. She's a coward who slept with my fiancé and then ran away so I could clean up her mess."

Elora stood up so fast her chair fell backward. "You bitch," she spat, her voice sharp and ugly, nothing like the sweet tone she used when she wanted something. "You think anyone will believe you? You're nothing. You've always been nothing."

"I know," I said quietly. "But now everyone else knows too."

****

The dinner ended after that.

My mother cried and blamed me for ruining the evening. My father escorted Elora upstairs, his arm around her shoulder like she was the victim. Nathaniel stayed at the table for a long time, not moving, not speaking, until finally he stood up and walked out without looking at me.

I cleared the dishes alone. I washed the glasses and packed the leftovers and blew out the candles, and when the house was dark and quiet I went to my room and sat on the edge of the bed with my hands in my lap.

My phone buzzed.

A message from an unknown number; the same one from last night.

"That was brave. And stupid. She won't forget this."

I typed back: "I don't care."

"You should. She's already planning something."

Before I could respond, another message came through; a photo. Marcus, walking out of his office building, looking tired and unaware. The photo had been taken today, from across the street. 

"Your friend looks tired," the text read. "Accidents happen."

My blood turned to ice.

I called Marcus immediately. He answered on the second ring. "Elena, you didn't call me about our meeting today, did something happen?"

"Someone is watching you," I said, my voice shaking. "Someone sent me a photo. I think Elora is threatening you because of what I said at dinner."

Marcus was quiet for a moment. Then: "I'll be careful. But Elena, listen to me, you need to get out of that house as soon as possible."

"I can't," I whispered. "If I leave, my family loses everything."

"Then we find another way," he said. "But you can't stay there. She's going to hurt you, Elena. Not just emotionally but physically. I've seen women like her. They don't stop."

I looked at the photo again. Marcus's face, unaware, vulnerable.

"I'll think about it," I said. "I promise."

"Promise me you'll call me if anything happens. Anything at all."

"I promise."

We hung up. I sat in the dark for a long time, staring at the ceiling, and I realized that the old Elena; the quiet one, the obedient one, the one who served wine and smiled and said nothing, had died at that dinner table.

The new Elena was still learning how to breathe.

But she was alive.

And she was done being invisible.

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