My dad’s wedding speech was all smiles and love until he delivered the words that destroyed my heart. I couldn’t breathe. I left, ruining the ideal day and revealing a secret my mom had guarded for years.
Seven years. My parents divorced that long ago, and I still didn’t understand why. I’m the sole adoptive child.
Brother and sister are my parents’ biological children. Tommy has Dad’s crooked smile, Jessica Mom’s nose. It never made me feel excluded.
I always got hazy answers from Mom concerning the divorce. She’d smile tightly without looking, then shift the subject. Dad?
He was resentful as if someone had wronged him and he couldn’t move on. One fight stuck in my mind. Hidden at the top of the stairs as they screamed in the kitchen, I was probably nine.
Despite all, Mom said, “You’re a jerk who doesn’t deserve his kids.”
Not understanding what that meant, I filed it away. You know kids don’t? We smooth up our parents’ stinging remarks and hope they make sense.
It felt too perfect when my father remarried lately. Everything was cream and gold, flowers everywhere, and superficially nice people laughing and conversing. It was flawless but nerve-wracking because you know something will break it.
I should have trusted that feeling. Dad stood up while I was standing with my younger brother and sister, trying to look happy and normal. His smile was big, unlike anything I’d seen in years.
Maybe ever. The room became silent when he raised his champagne glass. “I’m so blessed,” he said, and his warm voice made my chest tighten.
He looked at his new wife like she’d hand-hung the moon and stars for him. “Sarah brightened my life. She’s a fantastic mother and lady, and I can’t believe she’s my wife.”
Wedding guests’ quiet “aww” sounds filled the room.
My siblings shifted next to me, and I wondered if they felt as strange as I did. Dad looked at Sarah’s two daughters, maybe six and eight, in their identical pink outfits. The whole face brightened up.
“And to Emma and Sophie,” he added, warming up, “I can’t wait to be your dad. You gals are great, and I love you already.”
Children laughed, and Emma, the youngest, clapped. Cute and adorable.
It was everything a stepfather should tell his new daughters. I prepared for my turn. To gaze at us and say something nice about his real kids.
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