My dad took the phone. “Alyssa worked hard for this wedding. It’s luxury, it’s expensive. We don’t want a failure ruining the day.”
Failure. That word was familiar too. I heard Alyssa laughing in the background, like the decision was entertainment.
I could’ve fought. I could’ve shown up anyway, made a scene, proved their worst assumptions right. Instead I went silent. I muted the family thread, stopped replying to cousins, and spent the week pretending my stomach wasn’t clenched into a knot. The only time I broke that silence was when a florist called me by mistake, asking about an invoice “you approved.” I told her she had the wrong person and hung up, my skin prickling.
On the morning of the wedding, I sat on my apartment balcony with cold coffee and watched the sun brighten over the city. I tried to feel relief. If I wasn’t there, I couldn’t ruin anything, right?
At 4:17 p.m., my phone exploded with notifications. Missed calls. Texts. A voicemail from Jenna, breathless and shaking: “Emma, the venue—there’s a fire. Lucas did something. Alyssa is screaming. Everyone’s outside. It’s… it’s bad.”
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