My apartment was my sanctuary, built with years of sacrifice, and I truly believed I was about to share it with the man I loved. Instead, his sudden demand to claim it as his own pulled a seam loose in the life I had been living, and once that seam split open, the whole thing started to unravel. My fiancé wasn’t just planning a wedding.
He was planning a takeover. The dress was perfect. I know every bride says that, but this one didn’t feel like a dress so much as a version of myself I hadn’t been able to wear before.
It was a simple sheath of ivory silk, understated and expensive-looking without trying too hard, the kind of dress that seemed to glow rather than sparkle. When the saleswoman zipped me into it in that boutique on Madison Avenue, the fabric settled against my skin like it had already memorized me. I stood on the pedestal and looked at my reflection in the long mirror framed by soft lights.
My hair was clipped back. My face was bare except for mascara and lip balm. There was a paper cup of iced coffee sweating on the little side table and the faint smell of steamed fabric in the room.
Outside the fitting area, I could hear the soft murmur of other women talking about trains and veils and alterations and mothers-in-law. But in that moment, it all went quiet. I didn’t just see a bride.
I saw the woman I had worked very hard to become. Confident. Stable.
Loved. The kind of woman with a home of her own and a career she’d built herself and a future that seemed, for once, to be moving toward her instead of away from her. My fiancé, Mark, was going to lose his mind when he saw me in it.
That thought sent the warmest little rush through my chest. It had been doing that for months, that thought of him, that easy contentment I used to feel whenever I pictured his face. Mark had become, for lack of a better word, my fairy tale.
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