The invitation sat on my counter like a dare—thick cream card, pressed floral wreath, our names looped in rose-gold script: Sadie & Evan. I read it three times, then flipped it over, half-expecting an invisible ink addendum: Just kidding. Instead there was a handwritten line in Sadie’s tidy, schoolteacher pen: Nance—will you be my maid of honor?
I laughed—one sharp, surprised burst that startled my cat off the barstool. “You’re kidding,” I told the empty kitchen. The same kitchen where, twelve years earlier, I’d dissolved a giant wad of grape bubblegum out of my hair over the sink with olive oil because my kid sister had decided to make my high school graduation “more memorable.” The same kitchen where Sadie once told me I was “the main character of our family” and meant it like a bruise.
“Nance?” Liz called from the couch, a coffee mug tucked in both hands like a split-second heater. “Why do you sound like a cartoon supervillain?”
When my sister Sadie asked me to be her maid of honor, I wanted to believe it meant things were different between us. She’d always mixed love with cruelty, but as we planned her wedding—picking lavender dresses, tasting cakes—she seemed to soften. For the first time in years, I let myself imagine us as real sisters.
On the wedding day, I discovered the dress waiting for me was four sizes too big—a deliberate humiliation. My aunt, wise to Sadie’s tricks, had prepared a second lavender gown that fit perfectly. When I walked back into the bridal suite wearing it, Sadie faltered, caught between shame and pride.
I did my job anyway—stood by her side, gave a toast about our childhood, chose grace over revenge. Later, Sadie confessed: she had tried to make me small out of old jealousy and pain. For once, she apologized, and I believed her.
That night, under the lights and music, we danced like sisters again. And for the first time, it felt like the start of something new—like neither of us needed to shrink anymore.