Her Family Skipped Her Wedding. Then the Rich Fiancé’s Party Fell Apart-eirian

I knew the exact number of empty chairs at my wedding.

Thirty-seven.

Not a guess.

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Not a number that grew in my head later because pain likes to exaggerate when it is left alone too long.

Thirty-seven white folding chairs sat inside the rented marina event room, facing the windows and the gray evening water beyond them.

I knew because I had touched every single one.

The night before the wedding, I carried them in from the storage closet with Trevor and Earl from the shop.

The chair legs scraped against the floor, one after another, until the sound began to feel like a warning.

I pulled white covers over the backs until my fingers ached.

I tied cheap little ribbons because I could not afford the satin ones from the bridal store.

I trimmed grocery-store flowers in my kitchen sink, wiped pollen off the counter with the cuff of my sweatshirt, and told myself simple could still be beautiful.

Simple had to be beautiful, because simple was what we had.

The room was not fancy, but it had windows facing the docks.

Fishing boats rocked gently in their slips.

The marina smelled like salt air, barbecue smoke, damp rope, and the sweet vanilla frosting from the cake box.

The old air conditioner rattled overhead like it was arguing with God.

I remember standing there in my discount bridal dress, looking at the rows of chairs, and trying to believe people would come.

My dress had been marked down twice at a bridal shop off the highway.

It had a tiny loose thread near the zipper that Mrs. Donnelly promised nobody would notice.

Trevor’s suit was navy blue and a little tight across the shoulders, because he had lifted engines and boat parts for most of his adult life and still refused to buy anything expensive for himself.

His hands were clean that day.

He had scrubbed them until the skin around his nails looked raw.

Still, if you looked closely, the lines of his palms held a faint gray shadow of machine oil.

That was Trevor.

He repaired things.

Outboards.

Engines.

Broken dock lifts.

Old boats other people had given up on.

Sometimes, I thought he had chosen me with that same patient faith.

My family never understood him.

They saw work boots and grease and heard a quiet voice, and they decided he was less than men who wore expensive shirts and talked too loudly at dinner.

My younger sister, Khloe, had always been the opposite in their eyes.

She was the bright one.

The fragile one.

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