Chapter One: The Joke That Wasn’t Funny
People talk about wedding days as if they arrive wrapped in light.
They say everything slows down. The music turns soft around the edges. The flowers look brighter. Even the air feels touched by something sacred. For a while, mine really did feel like that.
When I woke up that morning, I had the strange calm of someone stepping into a future she had prayed for. My dress hung by the window, white and still. My mom cried the second she saw me in it. Ryan, my older brother, tried to act normal, but his eyes gave him away. He hugged me too long before the ceremony and whispered, “Dad would be proud of you today.”
That almost undid me.
My father had died when I was little, and ever since then, Ryan had been more than a brother. He had been a second wall in the house when life felt windy. He was not loud about love, but he was steady with it. He showed up. Fixed things. Not just broken appliances or squeaky doors, but moments. He had a way of standing in the right place when things could have gone wrong.
When I introduced Ed to my family, Ryan had taken his measure carefully. He didn’t dislike him. My mom liked Ed immediately. He was charming in the way some men are—quick smile, easy jokes, confident in any room. He knew how to flatter a mother and shake a hand firmly. He knew how to make people feel as though he belonged.
And maybe that was part of why I missed what should have been clearer.
There had been little moments before the wedding. Tiny ones. Easy to explain away if you were in love and already stitching your heart into a shared future. He liked being the center of attention. He teased in ways that sometimes stung. Once, at a party, he laughed when I asked him not to tell an embarrassing story about me and said, “Relax, babe. You’re too sensitive.”
I remember laughing too.
It is amazing what people will excuse when they want peace more than truth.
Still, that afternoon, standing in the reception hall with 120 guests smiling around us, I believed I was stepping into a joyful life. My mother was radiant. Ryan stood near the front in his suit, arms folded, watching everything with the quiet alertness he always carried. And Ed looked at me as though he had won something precious.
I thought I was safe.
Then came the cake.