He Called Me A Friend At His Sister’s Wedding — Then I Handed Her The Gift He Stole-Ginny

Monica’s smile slipped first. Then her gaze dropped to the cherry-blossom box in my hands, and the hallway light caught the fine gold paint along the lid. Butter and garlic drifted from the kitchen behind her. Somewhere deeper in the house, a drawer slid shut, silverware touched a plate, and tires hissed once over the gravel outside before a car engine cut off.

She stepped aside slowly. ‘Come in.’

The entryway was warm enough to sting my skin after the damp evening air. Framed family photos climbed the wall beside the staircase: school portraits, beach vacations, Christmas sweaters, Monica in braces, Raul in a graduation gown, Raul with an arm around his father at what looked like a golf club banquet. In every frame, he belonged without effort.

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I stood there in the same dusty-rose dress he had called disgusting, the second gift box pressed against my ribs hard enough to leave an edge-shaped ache. Monica looked over my shoulder toward the driveway.

‘Was Raul with you?’

‘No,’ I said. ‘He tried to stop me.’

Her brows knit, but she led me into the living room anyway.

Stanley was setting down a stack of napkins on the coffee table. Monica’s mother had one hand on a serving tray. Her father sat in a leather chair with the television turned low, blue light flickering over his glasses. The house smelled like roast chicken, warm bread, candle wax, and polished wood.

Monica touched my elbow lightly. ‘You can tell me now. What is this about?’

The box felt heavier when I passed it to her.

‘Before you open that,’ I said, ‘you should know I’m not Raul’s friend from work.’

No one spoke. The air held still.

‘We’ve been dating for eight months.’

Stanley’s hand stopped on the back of a chair. Monica stared at me as though she had missed a step in the dark.

‘No,’ she said. ‘No, I would have known.’

I swallowed once. ‘You should have. But at your wedding, Raul locked me in his car for two hours. He took my phone. Then he brought me inside after the ceremony and introduced me to everyone as a friend.’

Monica’s fingers tightened on the lid of the box. ‘That doesn’t make sense.’

‘He told me one of your bridesmaids was his ex. He didn’t want her seeing him with someone less impressive.’

The last two words scraped on the way out.

Stanley looked at Monica. Monica looked down at the box. ‘The Japan gift,’ she said quietly. ‘The tea ceremony. The yen.’

‘That was mine.’

Her head jerked up.

‘I saved for two months. I built the first one myself. He took it in with him and let you thank him for it.’

The room went so quiet I could hear the kitchen clock ticking near the stove.

Monica lifted the lid. Inside, the bills were banded neatly. The certificate lay beneath them, cream paper, black lettering, the Kyoto tea house seal embossed in red. Her thumb hovered over the calligraphy card tucked into the ribbon. Stanley leaned in, his mouth parting slightly.

‘Raul told us he spent weeks researching all this,’ Monica said. ‘He gave this whole speech about wanting to honor our dream properly.’

‘He didn’t research any of it. He doesn’t even like anime. He laughs at it.’

Stanley let out one hard breath through his nose. ‘That sounds more like him.’

Monica still hadn’t sat down. The box stayed open in her hands, and something in her expression had changed shape completely. Not disbelief anymore. Memory. Recalculation.

Outside, a car door slammed.

That sound dragged another one up from inside me: the metallic click of Raul’s key fob in the back lot at 2:31 p.m., the way he had looked through the glass like I was something smeared on it. Ever since then, my body had been working in fragments. Jaw tight. Shoulders locked. Hands cold even when everything else ran hot. That night after the wedding, I had stood under my shower until the bathroom mirror fogged white and the water went lukewarm, scrubbing away mascara and dust and sweat while the imprint of the door lock lived inside my chest.

Sleep never really came after that. The ceiling had stayed above me in flat gray strips until dawn, and every time my eyes closed, I heard the applause from the ceremony lawn rolling through the trees while I sat trapped behind dark glass. By morning, the pillowcase smelled like dried tears and setting spray. My phone lay on the nightstand with a crack of light under the screen, and Raul’s last text glowed there like something diseased: Had a great time tonight.

Four days later he arrived at my apartment with noodles and sesame chicken, talking around the takeout containers as if he had forgotten the parking lot entirely. That was when the rest of it came spilling out. His ex, Gina, had been one of Monica’s bridesmaids. Gina came from money. Gina’s father and his father played golf together. Gina fit. I didn’t.

He had stood in my living room with his shoes still on, setting plastic forks beside the cartons, and said, ‘You’re cute, but you’re not exactly country club material.’

Then he admitted Monica and Stanley believed the gift came from him.

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