Dad Chose A Fake Cat Memorial Over My Wedding, Then Mom Answered-eirian

I was barefoot in my Charlotte apartment when my father taught me that a daughter can be abandoned in broad daylight.

The wedding binder was open on the kitchen island, full of ribbon samples, vendor notes, and the careful lists women make when they are trying to keep joy from becoming a second job.

My coffee had gone cold beside the invitation proof with my name and Ethan’s name printed in gold.

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I had called Dad to ask one thing.

“Are you still walking me down the aisle?” I asked.

There was a pause.

Not confusion.

Guilt.

“Claire,” he said, “Addison planned something important that day.”

My sister’s voice came through the phone from somewhere behind him, soft and trembling like she had been waiting for her cue.

“It’s Pumpkin’s Remembrance Birthday,” Addison said.

Pumpkin was our mother’s cat, a seventeen-pound orange tabby with one cloudy eye, a bad attitude, and the power to knock water glasses off tables while making eye contact.

Pumpkin was also alive.

After Mom died, Addison turned that cat into a shrine with whiskers.

When Mom got sick, Addison grieved loudly, and I grieved by keeping the house running.

Dad called me the strong one.

At first I thought it was praise.

Then I realized it meant I was the daughter who could wait.

“My wedding has been on the calendar for thirteen months,” I said.

Addison began crying in the background.

“I’m sorry my grief is inconvenient to your aesthetic,” she said.

Dad sighed like both daughters had misbehaved equally.

“You know she’s fragile,” he said.

“I know she’s twenty-eight.”

“That’s not fair.”

“Neither is missing your oldest daughter’s wedding for a party for a living cat.”

Pumpkin meowed in the background like even she objected to being used as a weapon.

Then Dad said it.

“You have always been the strong one.”

I said, “I need you too.”

It came out smaller than I wanted.

“We can celebrate with you another time,” he said.

My wedding, another time.

I told him not to come if he could say that out loud.

Then I hung up before he found a way to make me apologize for being hurt.

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