At my stepsister’s wedding dinner, she thought it would be a great joke to introduce me by saying that I was just a nurse before laughing at her own wit. My father burst out laughing along with her while my stepmother just smirked at the table.
Everything stayed that way until the groom’s father stared at me and asked if I was the girl he remembered from a specific night. His next words froze the entire room and changed the atmosphere instantly.
“This is my stepsister, just a nurse,” my sister, Felicity, had said with the kind of tone you would use to describe a smudge on a window. There were one hundred and fifty guests at the Aspen Ridge Club with champagne glasses held high in the air.
My dad, Kenneth, laughed first because it was a real laugh that proved he agreed with her assessment of my life. I stood there in a forty-dollar dress among women wearing designer gowns and did what I have done my whole life by swallowing the insult.
What Felicity did not know was that the man at the head table, the groom’s father who was paying for this wedding, had felt me holding his heart together three years ago. His name was Silas Montgomery, a self-made billionaire, and he was finally starting to remember my face.
My name is Jenna Sterling, I am twenty-nine years old, and I work as a trauma nurse in a busy emergency room. This is the story of how my sister’s cruelest moment became the biggest mistake of her social life.
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