On my wedding day, my dress disappeared from the bridal room. Minutes later, my sister walked down the aisle wearing it — with my fiancé on her arm. “Surprise,” she told 200 guests. “We’re getting married instead.” What neither of them realized was that I had prepared a surprise of my own.For years, I believed Nick was the safest thing in my life. When we met, he made everything feel easy. That was his gift. My family loved him, too. Especially my sister, Lori.The first time she met him, we were all at my mom’s house for dinner. He helped bring plates to the table, laughed at my uncle’s bad jokes, and genuinely complimented Mom’s roast.Lori leaned over to me while he was in the kitchen and said, “Oh my God. If you don’t marry him, I will.”
Later that night, when I showed her the ring again in the kitchen, she turned it slowly under the light.”You always get everything first,” she said with a small laugh. “The good job. The good guy.”hen she handed it back and smiled like she was joking.When I later told Nick about Lori’s comment, he laughed.”Good to know I have options,” he said.It seemed like the kind of harmless joke families make when everything feels warm and safe.My mother was worse than Lori, in a way.You finally found a good man,” she said one Sunday. “Don’t let this one go.”I smiled so hard my cheeks hurt.My mother had always favored Lori.”She’s sensitive,” Mom would say whenever Lori got in trouble. “You’re stronger. You’ll be fine.”So hearing her approval felt like winning a medal.