I was excited to plan my perfect wedding, but my sister planned hers a day later, changing everything. What happened showed my family’s true loyalties, but the universe settled things. My sister Rachel was always competitive, but I never thought she would go this far.
Her actions, with our parents’ help, bitterened me and severed bonds. I was 25 and preparing my dream wedding to Alex, my three-year fiancé. One of those rare, quietly smart people who rarely speaks unless it counts.
Alex, 27, is attentive, grounded, and makes me feel noticed like never before. A foggy trek with pine needles crunching beneath us led to our engagement. As we planned our wedding, I hung onto that moment—how he held out the ring with shaking hands—for months.
We chose September 26. It was Friday. Since we didn’t enjoy showy stuff or attention, we chose something intimate.
We picked a small, family-run inn on the edge of town with ivy climbing the walls and fairy lights in the courtyard. It was simple but great for us. We arranged a small ceremony with close friends and family, followed by dinner at our favorite downtown restaurant, where laughter still echoed from the first night.
It was our first date. I finalized my preparations about a year in advance, confident they would not unravel. After everything seemed secure, the fault line appeared.
Enter Rachel. My sister, 28, has always been dramatic, even as an adult. She was our firstborn and always the “main character” in our family.
Let me explain her role in my story and its conclusion. Rachel married Bryan earlier that year in a courthouse wedding attended only by his two brothers. Her “big” wedding, the “glamorous one,” would happen later after logistics were straightened out.
Well, they solved them. I wasn’t concerned about my sister’s wedding until my cousin Emma called in late July. “Hey, did Rachel tell you the date for her wedding yet?”
I paused.
“No. Wait, did she finally pick one?”
She responded, “Yeah. September 27,” with a stomachbreaker.
“The day after mine?” I nearly dropped the phone. “That has to be a joke.”
Emma remained mute. “I thought you knew.”
I didn’t.
I apologized, hung up, and called Rachel immediately. Second ring, she picked up. “Rachel… seriously?
Why would you pick the day after mine? You know my wedding is September 26.”
Her voice broke like rubber. “Because it’s the day I wanted.
Deal with it.”
“That makes it impossible for people to attend both. Did you even think about—”
“My wedding is expensive. Yours is small and cheap, so mine matters more.
Besides, you can reschedule.”
It hit hard. She wanted to overshadow me again without pretending to care. I gazed at my screen like it insulted me.
The empty monitor glow appeared colder than ever, reflecting my uncertainty. “What does that even mean?” I whispered, shivering. The tense quiet between us drowned my words.
She didn’t reply. After an agonizing moment, the screen went black. Phone call ended.
I didn’t just care about our nuptials being set consecutively. Rachel’s wedding would be place three states away, making it hard for guests to pick! I stared at the fridge in the kitchen, partly expecting it to apologize for sharing Rachel’s ego.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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