“You’re not coming on this trip,” my husband’s sister declared.

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She replaced my name on the guest list with her yoga teacher. at boarding, she laughed and told me to leave. everyone ignored me — even my husband.

but the crew smiled and said, “welcome aboard, owner.”

I always start my morning slow. A cup of coffee in my favorite ceramic mug, the one with the small crack near the handle I never bother to replace. The kitchen window lets in just enough sun to make the granite counters gleam.

My husband, Lyall, had already left for a client meeting, leaving behind a trail of aftershave and a half-eaten banana. I was scrolling through my phone, mostly out of habit, thumbing through emails and calendar alerts, when I noticed a post from my niece. A boomerang—those looping video snippets—of a champagne toast, clinking glasses, a yacht in the background.

The caption read, “Family getaway tradition loading. Can’t wait to set sail.”

My thumb froze mid-scroll. The annual family yacht trip.

It had been a Preston family tradition for years, one I had been invited to exactly twice since marrying Lyall. The first time, I made the mistake of suggesting we rotate destinations. The second time, Valora, my sister-in-law, made it painfully clear I was a guest, not family.

I clicked into the post, then another—faces I knew. Flora’s tight-lipped smile. Her husband, Tom.

Ofully, my mother-in-law, holding a mimosa. Lyall’s younger cousin with his fiancée. Everyone except me.

There was a family group chat, “Preston Legacy Voyagers.” Lyall had added me a few years ago, then quietly removed me after an incident with a dinner seating chart. Long story. I checked anyway.

No chat, no messages, not a single email about the trip. I stared at my phone, the coffee cooling beside me. My pulse wasn’t racing.

Not exactly. It was something worse. Stillness.

A sinking confirmation that this wasn’t a mistake. It was deliberate. That afternoon, while rinsing out a glass in the kitchen sink, my phone buzzed with a message from Valora.

But it wasn’t meant for me. It was a screenshot of a group text. A photo of the finalized cabin assignments under “Portside Guest Rooms.” A name had been crossed out.

Mine. Next to it, “Confirmed for Belle.” Belle. Valora’s yoga instructor.

The one who’d once asked me if I was Lyall’s assistant. The next message was a voice note, Valora’s voice mid-laugh. “Well, at least the energy on board won’t be so tight this year.”

Tight.

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