Sister Destroyed Her Wedding Cake, Then the Bride Found the Forgery-eirian

I knew Ashley would do something at my wedding.

That sounds dramatic to people who grew up in families where birthdays were birthdays and graduations were graduations and a sister’s joy did not automatically become another sister’s emergency.

But I grew up with Ashley.

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Ashley was two years younger than me, prettier in the way people rewarded immediately, and talented at turning consequences into injuries.

If she lost a job, the manager had hated confident women.

If she maxed out a credit card, the bank had trapped her with predatory optimism.

If someone told her no, she treated the word like an attack that required witnesses.

My mother usually volunteered to be the first one.

By the time I married Liam, I was thirty-two and exhausted from being the dependable daughter.

I had paid Ashley’s emergency vet bill for a dog she later gave away.

I had covered two months of her rent after she decided her roommate’s “energy” was affecting her nervous system.

I had co-signed her first apartment because Mom cried and said Ashley just needed someone to believe in her.

Ashley moved out eight months later and left me with the final inspection fee.

The strangest part was that I still loved her.

That is the thing people misunderstand about family damage.

Love does not vanish just because trust does.

Sometimes love sits there like an old bruise, tender long after you know better than to touch it.

Three weeks before my wedding, Ashley called me during my lunch break.

I was sitting in my car outside a dry cleaner in Lincoln Park with my veil receipt on the passenger seat and a list of final vendor payments in my lap.

She opened with sweetness.

“Grace,” she said, dragging out my name like we were twelve and sharing secrets under a blanket, “I found something perfect.”

I should have known then.

Perfect was Ashley’s favorite word for expensive.

She sent me a photo of a cherry-red convertible parked under dealership lights, the hood shining like hard candy.

The message below it said, “This is literally my next chapter.”

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