Three days before my sister’s wedding, my mom sent a message that felt like a quiet warning wrapped in polite words.“Sophia, we need to talk about seating. With the kind of guests attending, it’s probably best if you sit toward the back and skip the formal photos. Clare’s in-laws are very important people. You understand, right?”I read it again and again, hoping I misunderstood. But the meaning was clear: I was someone they needed to hide.My sister was marrying into the Wellington family—wealthy, influential, the kind of people who treated status like currency. My mother admired them deeply, almost obsessively, as if being close to them meant she had finally reached something better.I was twenty-seven, living in Washington, D.C., working as a policy analyst—something that sounded impressive to strangers but never seemed good enough for my family. To them, I was always the one who didn’t quite measure up.
Still, I replied calmly: I’ll be there. Sit me wherever you think is best.Not because I agreed—but because I refused to create a scene at my sister’s wedding.Right after I sent the message, Daniel called.We had met quietly months earlier, and despite who he was—the president’s son—he had always treated me like a real person, not an accessory. That’s why we kept things private.When he found out about the wedding, his tone shifted.“They’re putting you in the back?” he asked.“It’s just family stuff,” I said, trying to minimize it.No,” he replied firmly. “It’s not. I’m coming with you.”I knew that would change everything.When I arrived at my parents’ house the next day, my mom immediately tried to manage the situation again.She told me to come late, sit in the back, and avoid photos—anything to keep me from “ruining the image.”Even the rehearsal dinner? I wasn’t invited.That night, I sat alone in my childhood room while they celebrated without me.Then Daniel texted: