I found out I was excluded from my own sister’s wedding on a Tuesday afternoon in late September, sitting in my Denver apartment with a cup of coffee growing cold between my hands. The Rockies were hazy outside my window, the way they always looked when wildfire smoke drifted in from somewhere far away. My laptop was open on the kitchen table, spreadsheets glowing on the screen, another ordinary day.
My mother called while I was reviewing quarterly reports for the pharmaceutical distribution company where I worked as a supply chain analyst.
The caller ID flashed “Mom – Home,” with the little suburban Colorado house emoji I’d added as a joke years ago. I almost didn’t answer.
Almost. “Samantha, honey, we need to talk about Jessica’s wedding,” Mom said as soon as I picked up, her voice carrying that particular tone she used when delivering bad news she wanted to pretend was not actually bad.
“What about it?” I asked, setting down my pen and pushing my glasses up my nose.
“I already requested the time off work. The wedding is in three weeks, right?”
There was a pause. A long one.
The kind of silence that makes your stomach drop before the words even arrive, like watching a glass fall in slow motion and knowing it’s going to shatter.
“Well, that’s the thing,” she said finally. “Your father and I were handling all the travel arrangements and somehow we forgot to book your plane ticket and your hotel room.
We just realized it yesterday when confirming everything, and now all the flights are completely booked. The hotel too.
It’s peak season in Maui, apparently.”
I stared at the wall of my small home office nook, where I’d pinned a photo from last Christmas at my parents’ house in suburban Denver.
All of us together, smiling in front of a fake tree from Costco. Matching red-and-white sweaters. Jessica had her arm looped through mine, her diamond engagement ring catching the light.
We looked like one of those picture-perfect American families people frame and put over the fireplace.
We were sisters. We were supposed to be close.
“You forgot,” I repeated slowly, the word feeling heavy on my tongue. “These things happen, sweetheart,” Mom rushed on.
I could hear clinking dishes in the background, the low hum of the TV tuned to some daytime talk show.
The story doesn’t end here –
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