“In front of half the family.”
A long silence. Then: “What are you planning?”
“Dinner at the vineyard. Saturday. Same time as her rehearsal event.”
Grandma made a small sound that might have been approval. “Who’s invited?”
“Everyone she cut, dismissed, used, or forgot.”
That included Aunt Denise, no longer “close enough” after gaining weight following cancer treatment. Cousin Becca, denied a plus-one while Savannah handed them to influencers she barely knew. Uncle Ray, excluded after lending my parents money they still hadn’t repaid. My father’s sister Carol, removed from the seating chart because she refused to wear the exact shade of champagne Savannah wanted in family photos. It turned out my sister hadn’t planned a wedding. She had curated a social purge.
Once I began making calls, the guest list built itself.
Some people hesitated at first. They asked if this was revenge, if it would make things worse, if I was sure. I answered honestly every time.
“It’s not revenge,” I said. “It’s an invitation.”
Naomi and I moved quickly. By 8 p.m., she had chefs arranged, string lights checked, staff scheduled, and six cases of our estate pinot pulled from reserve. I handled the personal part. I called every relative Savannah had treated as disposable and invited them to dinner at Alder Ridge—no gifts, no politics, no speeches, just a table for people who had apparently become inconvenient.
The responses told me more about my family than any holiday ever had.
Aunt Denise cried.
Uncle Ray laughed for a full ten seconds.