She took it way too far.
We were at my dad’s place for Sunday dinner. The usual crew was there: me, Evan, my little sister Chloe, who’s 24, funny, brutally honest, and my best friend, along with Dad and Janine. Dinner was roasted chicken, salad, and red wine.
Janine was already in rare form, loudly telling Chloe about her Pilates instructor’s cat allergy as if it were breaking news. Then, somewhere between salad and dessert, she cleared her throat dramatically and said, “So…
I already found my dress for the wedding!”
She said it like she’d just invented sliced bread. I blinked.
“Oh, nice,” I replied, keeping it light. “What color did you pick?”
She beamed and pulled out her phone. “Here!
Let me show you!”
She turned the screen toward me, still grinning. I froze. It was white.
Not just white. It was a full-length, lacy, mermaid-style gown with a beaded bodice and a train. A literal wedding dress.
I looked at her, confused. “Uh…
Janine, that’s… white.”
She laughed. Not the warm kind.
The high-pitched, too-loud kind she always does when she’s being dismissive. “Oh, come on! It’s ivory, not white.
No one will confuse me for the bride!”
Chloe, who had just taken a sip of water, choked so hard she had to grab Evan’s sleeve to steady herself. Janine kept smiling, unbothered. Dad furrowed his brow slightly but said nothing.
He just looked down at his wine glass. I stared at him, willing him to say something, anything. He didn’t.
“Janine,” I said, doing my best to sound calm, “I’d really appreciate it if you didn’t wear something that looks like a wedding dress to my wedding.”
She waved a perfectly manicured hand like I was being silly. “Sweetie, you’re overreacting. You’re wearing that simple, casual gown, right?
This will look completely different.”
That made my blood run cold. I leaned forward. “Wait… how do you know what my dress looks like?”
She smiled, that tight-lipped, smug kind of smile.
“Your dad showed me a photo when you sent him the design. It’s cute — very boho, very you.”
Evan sat up straighter next to me. Chloe muttered, “What the hell…” under her breath.
I stared at my dad, stunned. “You showed her my dress?”
Dad looked uncomfortable. “I didn’t think it was a big deal.
She just asked to see it.”
I swallowed hard, my voice thin. “It was a big deal. I trusted you with that.”
Janine, still smiling, took another bite of salad like we weren’t even talking about something so personal.
I didn’t sleep well that night. My chest felt tight, and my mind kept circling back to that smug look on Janine’s face. The next morning, I got a call from Mia, the seamstress I’d been working with on my custom gown.
“Hey Ellie,” she said, her voice a little hesitant, “I wanted to check in about something…
Janine, your dad’s partner, reached out yesterday.”
I sat up. “She what?”
“Yeah, she asked if I could make her a similar dress. She said she wanted something more ‘glamorous’ but with the same pattern.”
I couldn’t speak for a second.
“She asked for my dress?”
“She asked for the pattern you designed. I wasn’t sure what to say. I told her I’d check with you, obviously.”
I felt like the air had been knocked out of me.
Janine wasn’t just wearing white. She was trying to upstage me. It was the dress I’d spent months sketching, choosing fabrics for, and working on with Mia, using lace details inspired by my mom’s wedding photos.
And now she wanted to hijack it. I hung up and immediately called Chloe. “She’s psychotic,” Chloe said flatly.
“She wants to be the bride at your wedding.”
“She laughed when I told her not to wear white,” I said, still reeling. “What did Dad say?”
“Nothing. He just sat there.”
Chloe made a disgusted noise.
“Of course he did. He lets her bulldoze everything.”
I stared out the window at the trees swaying outside. I could feel the anger simmering just under my skin.
“I’m not letting her do this,” I said finally. Chloe’s voice softened. “Good.
What are you gonna do?”
I took a breath. “I don’t know yet. But she’s not walking into my wedding dressed like me.”
I was furious, but I didn’t scream.
I didn’t throw anything. I didn’t even call Janine, though I wanted to. I just sat with Evan on the couch that night, legs pulled up under me, while he paced the living room like he was one deep breath away from marching to my dad’s house.
“I swear, Ellie,” he said, rubbing the back of his neck, “if you give me the green light, I’ll talk to her myself.”
I shook my head. “No. That’s exactly what she wants — drama.
A scene. She thrives on that. Let her think she’s winning.”
Evan stopped pacing.
“So what are you gonna do?”
I smiled, though it wasn’t a nice smile. “I have an idea.”
And I did. Over the next few weeks, Janine could not shut up about her dress.
At my bridal shower, she floated around the room like she was the star of a reality show. “You ladies will die when you see my gown,” she told Evan’s mom, practically twirling her wine glass. “It’s elegant but daring — definitely going to turn heads.”
“I’m sure it will,” I said, smiling through my teeth.
Chloe caught my eye from across the room. She mouthed, “You okay?” and I gave her a subtle nod. We had a plan.
That night, I emailed every female guest on the invite list, including Evan’s cousins, my aunts, and even the florist’s assistant, who I knew would be snapping some behind-the-scenes photos. The subject line was simple: A Fun Wedding Request! Inside, I wrote a short note:
I purposely left Janine off the thread.
The following week, I met with Mia, my seamstress, again. I brought coffee and a new idea. “I need a second dress,” I told her.
“Something bright. Something completely different from the one I designed before.”
She blinked. “You’re changing your dress a week before the wedding?”
“I’m changing everything,” I said.
Mia laughed softly. “All right. What are we thinking?”
“Sunflower yellow,” I said.
“Chiffon. White lace accents. And a golden sash.”
Her eyes lit up.
“That could be gorgeous.”
I smiled. “That’s the point.”
*****
