The Uniform Her Family Tried To Hide Silenced The Wedding Room-hothiyenvy_5

“You’ll embarrass us.”

That was the sentence my mother thought would make me fold.

She said it three months before my sister’s wedding, while I was standing in my Jacksonville apartment eating cold spaghetti over the kitchen sink because I was too tired to sit down.

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The air outside my window was heavy with summer storm heat.

Somewhere down the hall, my neighbor’s dog was barking at nothing, the kind of sharp little bark that makes an apartment hallway feel even smaller than it is.

My phone had buzzed at 8:17 p.m.

Mom.

I wiped sauce from my thumb and answered because I still did that back then.

No matter how tired I was.

No matter how often the call ended with me feeling like I had been measured and found inconvenient.

“Hey,” I said. “Everything okay?”

The pause on the other end was small, but my body recognized it.

My mother had pauses for different emergencies.

This one was not a hospital pause or a death pause.

This was a family-management pause.

“Claire, sweetheart,” she said. “Do you have a minute?”

She only called me sweetheart when she wanted something or feared something.

Sometimes both.

“What’s going on?” I asked.

“It’s about Renee’s wedding.”

Of course it was.

My younger sister had been planning that wedding since February with the intensity of a military operation and none of the chain of command.

There were spreadsheets.

There were emergency shoe options.

There were signature cocktails named after inside jokes nobody remembered.

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