The wedding couldn’t have been more perfect—until Dad suddenly gripped my hand and whispered, “Get in the car, now.”

8

Something I couldn’t risk saying back there.”

My stomach dropped. He looked me d:e:ad in the eye, and what he revealed next left me utterly speechless…

I froze in the passenger seat as Dad’s words sank in. “Emily shouldn’t be married to David.

He’s not who he says he is.”

The weight of that sentence crushed me. “What are you talking about?” I whispered. Dad ran a hand through his graying hair, his breathing uneven.

“I didn’t want to ruin her day without proof, but I found something two nights ago. I went to David’s apartment to drop off some old tools he borrowed. He wasn’t home, but his mailbox was stuffed with letters.

One had no return address, just a name: Rebecca Morales. I recognized it instantly.”

The name meant nothing to me. I frowned.

“Who is she?”

Dad’s eyes narrowed. “Your aunt. My sister.

The one who disappeared twenty-five years ago.”

It felt like the ground shifted beneath me. I’d heard fragments over the years about a distant relative — whispers of a long-lost sister, an old family rift — but Mom always shut down the conversation before I could learn more. The story was always incomplete, scattered.

And now, Dad was telling me that David had some kind of link to her? “You’re saying Emily’s husband is…related to your missing sister?”

Dad nodded. “The letter was from Rebecca.

She wrote to David, calling him ‘my son.’ That makes him your cousin. Which means—”

I felt sick. “Which means Emily just married her cousin.”

The silence that followed was deafening.

I shook my head in disbelief, grasping at straws. “No, there has to be a mistake. Maybe it’s a different Rebecca Morales.

Maybe it’s not her.”

Dad slammed his fist against the steering wheel, startling me. “I wish that were true. But the letter had details only Rebecca could’ve written—about our childhood, about our parents.

It’s her. There’s no doubt.”

covered my mouth with my hand, struggling to breathe. The wedding reception was still going on without us, Emily probably wondering why I had disappeared.

I thought of her dancing, smiling, blissfully unaware of the truth. “Why didn’t you stop the wedding?” I demanded. “I tried,” Dad said, his voice cracking.

“But how do you destroy your daughter’s happiness without proof? Without giving her the chance to confront it herself? I couldn’t do it there, in front of everyone.

But you had to know first. You’ll need to help me tell her.”

A deep ache settled in my chest as the truth began to take hold. Emily had just vowed forever to someone who might not just be a stranger — but possibly our blood.

The hours following Dad’s confession were a blur of anxiety and disbelief. We sat in the kitchen, the room dim except for the soft light from the stove clock. With shaking hands, Dad slid a letter across the table toward me.

I read it once. Then again. Each word etched itself deeper into my mind, burning like a brand.

“My dear David, I know you don’t want contact, but I cannot stay silent anymore. I’ve watched from afar for years. Your father kept you from me, but I’ve always loved you.

Your new life in Chicago sounds promising. Please don’t shut me out completely.”

The handwriting was neat, almost elegant. But what struck me most was the signature: Rebecca Morales.

I looked up at Dad. “If this is real, Emily has a right to know. But how do we even tell her?

On her wedding night?”

Dad’s face was hollow, lined with anguish. “There’s no good time. But the longer we wait, the worse it gets.”

We argued for hours, our voices rising and falling, emotions clashing with each point made.

I urged caution—wondering if the letter could be misunderstood or if there was another explanation. But Dad stood his ground, insisting that facing the truth was more important than avoiding discomfort. At last, just as the first light of dawn filtered through the blinds, we headed back to the hotel where Emily and David were staying.

My heart tightened with each step through the lobby, the elevator ride, and finally as we stood outside their door. Dad knocked firmly. David opened the door, still wearing his rumpled tuxedo shirt, looking both tired and quietly confident.

Behind him, Emily appeared — her hair loose, eyes weary but glowing with happiness. “Dad? What’s going on?” she asked.

I wanted to scream, to pull her away, to beg her not to look at that letter. But Dad stepped forward, handed it to her, and said, “Emily, you need to read this.”

The room went silent as Emily unfolded the paper. Her eyes scanned the lines, her lips parting in shock.

David froze, color draining from his face. “David,” she whispered, “is this true?”

He didn’t say anything. His silence was enough.

Emily’s knees buckled, and I caught her before she fell. That was the moment our family fractured. The wedding day that was supposed to be the happiest of Emily’s life ended in devastation.

And when I held my sister, sobbing into my shoulder, I realized nothing would ever be the same again.