When Nicole walks down the aisle, two seats are left empty by choice. For once, everyone sees what she’s lived with all her life. As the fallout quietly unfolds, Nicole is finally faced with a question she never dared ask aloud: What happens when the people who raised you never really saw you at all?
“You sent them an invite, right?” my cousin, Gina, whispered, glancing at the empty seats at the family table. “Of course I did,” I nodded, fingers tightening around my champagne flute. “They just… didn’t come.”
The moment when the whispers started.
The glances. The quiet exchanges between relatives who hadn’t spoken in years but could still recognize a family fracture when they saw one. The seats at the head table were decorated, and names were printed on little cards in soft gold script.
“Mary and Anthony, Parents of the Bride.”
Untouched. When I got engaged to Leo, I didn’t expect fanfare from them. They’d never been overly warm when it came to me.
They never really fussed over milestones in my life. There were no over-the-top graduation parties. And there wasn’t an emotional send-off when I moved for my first job.
There were just polite nods and occasional questions about my rent or car maintenance, as if parenting was a checklist and I was just another task. It was Ethan, my younger brother, who got everything else. The spotlight.
The back-patting. And the unwavering, all-consuming support that a child is supposed to get from their parents. Ethan was the athlete, the pride of the family.
My parents adored him with everything they had. They even lied to me about my college fund being “lost” in an emergency, only for me to find out, years later, that they had used it for the down payment on Ethan’s house and a brand-new SUV. Still, I held out hope.
I wish I could say I didn’t, but I did. A wedding felt different. It felt like something they couldn’t ignore, something too big, too public, and too meaningful to dismiss.
Maybe, just maybe, seeing their daughter marry the love of her life would finally matter. Maybe I’d get to see pride on their faces instead of indifference. I mailed the wedding invitation to them.
I followed up by text. But there was no reply. I even stopped by a month before the wedding, armed with a binder full of seating plans and vendor invoices, half excuse, half olive branch, just to give them an opening.
“Mom,” I said, careful not to sound accusatory. “Did you get the invitation?”
“Yes, Nicole,” my mother waved her hand without looking up from her phone. “The invitation came in the mail.
It’s a very pretty invitation. But we won’t be able to make it, dear.”
“You… won’t? What?” I blinked.
I couldn’t believe it. “Nicole, Ethan’s final game of the season is that weekend,” she said cheerfully. “It’s a huge one, he asked us to be there.
So, that’s where we’re going to be.”
In that moment, I felt something inside me go still. Like a clock stopping. Not shattering, just… quiet.
“The schedule just came out last week,” she added, like that explained everything. And I understood. I always came second.
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