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.”
We laughed.
Even Nick laughed when I told him later.
He threw an arm around my shoulders and said, “Good to know I have options.”
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.
Two years later, Nick proposed during a walk in the park where we had our first date.
“Yes,” I said before he’d even finished opening the ring box.
He laughed.
“I didn’t even finish.”
He slid the ring onto my finger, and I threw my arms around his neck. I pictured growing old with him.
I started planning my childhood dream wedding.
We booked a beautiful church and made a guest list that got out of control almost immediately.
Nick was involved in all of it.
Early in the planning process, we decided to split the costs evenly. Getting that to work in practical terms was a challenge, though.
One night, after hours of sifting through quotes and invoices to divide up the costs and figure out who would sign which contract, I slumped onto the table and screamed into the paperwork.
Nick took the stack of vendor packets from me and said, “Let me handle the contracts.”
I looked up.
“You sure?”
“Of course I’m sure.” He grinned. “I’m the groom. I should do something besides show up and look handsome.
You can just transfer your share of the payment before the wedding.”
So, while I studied color swatches and had in-depth discussions about flowers, he went through the admin.
Whenever we’d finished signing off on something, he’d show me the invoice and note down how much I owed to cover my half of the cost.
We were combining our lives. Nothing about that felt strange to me.
If anything, it felt mature. Like a partnership.
Three months before the wedding, I came home early from work because a client meeting got canceled.
Nick’s car was already in the driveway.
I smiled when I saw it.
He was supposed to be working late, and my first thought was that maybe we’d get an unexpected quiet night together.
I walked in quietly, kicking off my heels by the door.
Then I heard voices in the living room.
“Andrea still has no idea,” Lori said.
Nick snorted. “Of course she doesn’t.
She trusts us completely.”
I froze. What did I not know about?
Then Lori said, lower this time, “So when are you actually dumping her, baby?”
What?
Nick chuckled. “Once the wedding day comes, we’ll handle it.
By then, she’ll have paid for everything, and you can just take her place. It’s perfect.”
I wanted to believe it was all a bad dream, but there was no mistake, and no misunderstanding.
Nick and Lori… Talking about me like I was stupid.
Like I was a wallet in a white dress.
I backed away quietly, walked out the front door, and got in my car.
I cried first. Then I got angry.
Then I started planning.
If they wanted to humiliate me, I was not going to make it easy.
Over the next three months, I learned how deep it went.
They were sloppy because they thought I was blind. Or maybe because people get reckless when they believe they’ve already won.
Nick showered with his phone on the sink one night, and messages lit up the screen.
The photos and texts Nick and Lori had been exchanging cleared away the last of my doubts — my fiancé was cheating on me with my sister.
But that wasn’t even the worst part.
One day, I was at my parents’ house when a message preview from Lori lit up Mom’s iPad.
What do we do if Andrea freaks out?
Mom was in the bathroom, and she hadn’t locked the device. I tapped on the message.
That’s when I saw the message that changed something in me for good.
She won’t. She’s always been too soft to fight back.
I stared at it so long that the words blurred.
My mother was in on it.
I took a screenshot and sent it to myself, then deleted it. The three of them were in for a big surprise on the wedding day!
The church looked beautiful on the wedding day. The flowers, the decorations… it was all perfect.
It brought tears to my eyes knowing that it was all a sham, but I wiped them away. I had to ensure all the plans were in place for my surprise.
Little did I know just how thoroughly Lori and Nick intended to betray me.
I entered the bridal suite in time to get ready for “my wedding.”
But my gown was gone.
I stared at the empty hanger.