“I have already paused every remaining payment for this wedding,” he said. “The deposits already paid stay paid. Everything else stops until I decide whether I’m still part of this.”
Brianna stared at him. “You’re paying for my wedding and you’re doing this here?”
“I was paying for your wedding,” he said. “Now I’m deciding whether I should.”
Her face collapsed, then hardened again.
“So that’s it?” she asked. “You pick her over me?”
Marcus looked stunned for half a second.
Then sad.
And that was worse.
“No,” he said quietly. “I am choosing my wife over your behavior.”
“Same thing.”
“It isn’t.”
Brianna laughed once, sharp and ugly. “Of course it is. Ever since you married her, everyone acts like she’s perfect. Like she’s classy and sweet and grateful and you got lucky.”
Jenna made a small sound beside her.
Marcus said nothing.
Brianna kept going because once people like her crack, they either fall apart or spill everything.
“Do you know what Aunt Carol said at Easter?” she demanded. “‘Marcus really married up.’ Right in front of me. Like I was supposed to smile. Like the rest of us were all just messes with no futures.”
There it was. Of all the possible reasons for her cruelty, jealousy over her brother’s good marriage was not one I had expected.
Marcus took a slow breath.
“Bri,” he said, and his voice changed. You could hear how tired he was. “I was your brother. I changed your diapers. I packed your lunches. I signed your field trip forms when Dad was working. I sat outside your room when you had nightmares. That was love. But this-” He pointed between me and himself. “This is my marriage. I know we haven’t spent that much time together lately. But you need to respect my wife.”
Brianna stared at him as if he had hit her.
Then she turned to me. And this time, she truly looked at me.
She did not see me as someone to compete with, and in that moment, she did not seem to feel I was stealing her brother away.
My body was still fuller from the miscarriage. My face was still so exhausted that makeup could not hide it. I had put on lipstick that morning with a shaking hand. I was standing upright mostly because I felt I had to, not because the pain had stopped.
Brianna seemed to process all of that in one split second, and something in her expression changed.
“I didn’t know,” she said.
Marcus went cold again. “You knew enough. I know you suspected the pregnancy.”
She closed her eyes.
“I knew you were struggling,” she said to me. “I just told myself it wasn’t my problem.”
That struck harder than a polished apology would have. Suddenly, Brianna was completely honest, and I appreciated that more than I expected.
Jenna stepped forward and placed her beach bag at her feet.
“I can’t do this today,” she said to Brianna. “Not like this.”
Another bridesmaid nodded.
Then another.
No one gave a speech. They simply looked embarrassed and finished.
Brianna’s eyes filled with tears.
She looked back at me.
“I am sorry,” she said. “For saying it. For planning it. For knowing you were already hurting and doing it anyway. I knew once you guys stopped talking to us every week any more.”
I believed maybe half of it.
But half was still more honest than where she had started.
Marcus looked at me then.
“I think you can handle it from here,” he said.
That was what helped me breathe again.
I realized he had never thought he had to protect me, and he did not believe I was as fragile as I had felt lately. He also knew I could stand up for myself.
I looked at Brianna, then at the women around her, then at the bright blue water beyond the fence.
“I don’t want revenge,” I said.
Nobody moved.
“I want distance. I want you to leave me alone. I want no fake apology tour, no crying calls, no family pressure, no messages about how stressed you are. I don’t want this to be another pageant that’s just supposed to put you in the limelight.”
Brianna began crying for real then.
Marcus stood firmly beside me, and that was when I understood he had changed something inside himself too.
He had spent years shielding her from every hard edge of life. He was not doing that anymore.
He nodded once.
“Then that’s what happens,” he said. “The payments stay paused. You can explain to your fiancé why. You can explain to Dad why. And when you’ve spent enough time figuring out who you’ve been lately, you can decide whether you want to speak to us again.”
Brianna wiped at her face. “Marcus-”
“No,” he said.
She flinched.
Quiet from him had always meant there was nothing left to discuss.
Marcus exhaled and looked at me.
“Do you still want to be here?” he asked.
I looked past him toward the water.
At the slides.
At the families and little kids and women of every size walking around in swimsuits without apologizing for taking up space.
Six weeks of hiding had made my world very small, and I was tired of disappearing before anyone else had the chance to make me.
“Yes,” I said.
“Yes,” I said.
He had rented one cabana under my name.
Not the entire section.
Just one shaded space with two loungers, a table, and enough quiet to breathe.
We spent the afternoon there.
Not performing.
Not celebrating.
Just existing.
Jenna and the other women sat with us for a while. Later, when I checked my phone, their names had disappeared from the bridal party group chat one by one.
Marcus bought me lemonade I barely touched.
I put my feet in the water.
I let the sun warm my shoulders.
I did not feel healed. I did not feel beautiful. But I felt visible, and that was more than I had felt in weeks.
On the drive home, Marcus kept one hand on the wheel and the other wrapped around mine.
After a while, I said, “Are you okay?”
He took a moment before answering.
“No,” he said. “But I have you.”
I turned toward him.
He kept his eyes on the road.
“I think I kept telling myself Brianna would grow up if I loved her enough,” he said. “I know now that’s not true.”
I squeezed his hand.
He squeezed back.
Then he glanced over at me for one second and said, “I’m done asking you to make yourself smaller so other people can stay comfortable.”
That was when I cried.
In the car, on the way home, with my husband’s hand in mine and my black swimsuit still damp in the shopping bag at my feet.
Because for the first time since the miscarriage, I began to feel like myself again.