For my sister Claire Whitman’s big wedding, my family invited my 11-year-old son, Noah, but not my 9-year-old daughter, Lily.
The invitation arrived on a Thursday afternoon in our mailbox in Portland, Oregon, wrapped in cream paper and tied with a pale blue ribbon. Noah’s name was written beneath mine and my husband Jason’s. Lily’s name was missing.
At first, I thought it was a mistake.
I called my mother, Margaret, while Lily was upstairs practicing a song she wanted to sing for her aunt at the reception.
My mother answered too quickly, like she had been waiting for the call.
“Mom,” I said, staring at the envelope. “Lily isn’t on the invitation.”
There was a pause. Then she sighed.
“Emily, don’t make this difficult.”
My stomach tightened.
Claire got on the line next. Her voice was polished and cold. “We’ve all decided she shouldn’t come.”
“All?” I asked.
“Mom, Dad, me,” Claire said.
“It’s a formal wedding. Lily gets overwhelmed. She cries.
She asks too many questions. And honestly, Emily, I don’t want the day to become about her.”
I looked through the kitchen doorway and saw Lily’s pink sneakers at the bottom of the stairs. She was listening.
“She’s nine,” I said.
“She’s disruptive,” Claire answered.
Lily ran upstairs before I could move.
Something inside me went very still.
For months, I had been helping Claire’s wedding happen.
Not emotionally helping. Financially helping. Our father, Richard, had suffered a stroke the year before and could no longer manage the family business accounts clearly, so I had stepped in.
I paid the deposits. I negotiated with vendors. I quietly covered the shortfalls Claire never mentioned to her fiancé, Ben Carter.
By then, Jason and I had paid almost $38,000 toward the wedding.
I didn’t shout.
I didn’t argue. I simply said, “Noted. We won’t be attending.”
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