Her Family Mocked Her Uniform Until Five Hundred Marines Rose-eirian

The morning of my wedding began with the smell of starch, polished leather, and coffee cooling untouched on a side table.

I had imagined quiet.

Not perfect quiet, because weddings are never quiet, not even military chapel weddings with strict schedules and printed programs and people who know how to stand in formation.

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But I had imagined peace.

I had imagined buttoning my dress blues, putting on my gloves, taking one last breath, and walking toward the man who loved me without needing a softer version of me.

Instead, my phone vibrated before the chapel bells had even warmed the morning air.

At first, I did not look down.

I already knew who it was.

Some people enter a room before they open the door.

My sister had always been one of them.

Sophia could make herself present through a text, a pause, a look across a dinner table, or the kind of smile that told you she had found the bruise and was deciding how hard to press.

I stood in the preparation room at Marine Corps Base Quantico and studied myself in the mirror.

The woman looking back at me wore Marine Corps dress blues.

Four silver stars sat on her shoulders.

Her hair was pinned neatly.

Her collar was exact.

Her hands were steady because they had learned to be steady in rooms where fear did not care what day it was.

In the far corner, a white wedding gown hung inside a garment bag.

My mother had mailed it three weeks earlier.

She had not called first.

She had not asked.

There was no note tucked into the box.

Just the dress, folded in tissue paper, sent like a correction.

I had looked at it once when it arrived, then carried it to the corner and left it there.

I never unzipped the garment bag.

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