The day before her wedding, my sister smiled and said the best gift I could give her was to disappear for a while. So I did exactly that. I sold the condo she already thought was hers, placed an envelope at every guest’s table, and by the time dinner began, the truth was ready to open.

The day before her wedding, my sister smiled and said the best gift I could give her was to disappear for a while. So I did exactly that. I sold the condo she already thought was hers, placed an envelope at every guest’s table, and by the time dinner began, the truth was ready to open.

I pulled into my sister’s driveway on a cool late September afternoon, the kind where the air feels still and expectant, like it is holding its breath for whatever comes next. I had driven over straight from work in downtown Milwaukee, still in my blazer, still with my laptop bag in the back seat, telling myself this visit would be simple. One day before Evelyn’s wedding. One quick check-in. One last sister moment before everything in her life shifted. It was strange how hopeful I still was, even after all these years of drifting apart.

I stepped inside without knocking, because that was how we used to be, back when we were two girls clinging to each other after losing our parents in a winter accident that shattered everything. Back then, Evelyn was all I had left. I used to tell myself I was all she had left too.

Her living room was filled with garment bags, fresh flowers, and the faint smell of hairspray. Evelyn stood in front of a long mirror in her guest room, still in jeans but wearing the bodice of her wedding gown, her hair pinned into a loose updo. She looked radiant in that effortless way she always had, the kind that made people naturally fall in line behind her. Yet when she saw me in the doorway, her shoulders tightened just a little.

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