She Wore Her Dress Blues To The Wedding Her Family Tried To Hide-Quieen - Chainityai

She Wore Her Dress Blues To The Wedding Her Family Tried To Hide-Quieen

My mother did not invite me home for my brother’s wedding because she missed me.

She invited me because an empty chair would have been harder to explain than an inconvenient daughter.

That was the first thing I understood when I walked into the house in Weston and saw my old room stripped down like a rental nobody intended to renew.

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The bed was gone.

The desk was gone.

The shelves where I had once kept track medals, paperback novels, and cheap picture frames from school trips had been replaced by rolling clothing racks and garment bags.

Wes’s wedding suits had taken over the room I used to sleep in.

The hallway smelled like hairspray, coffee left too long on the burner, and expensive flowers beginning to bruise at the edges.

I stood there with my canvas bag against my leg, wearing the faded green travel jacket I had slept in on the flight home, and waited for my mother to notice the thing folded carefully across my arm.

She noticed it immediately.

She just pretended not to.

Evelyn could ignore anything she did not want to explain.

She had ignored my enlistment.

She had ignored my deployments except when she wanted a photo for Christmas.

She had ignored the wire transfers I sent home when Wes called from a bar bathroom or a florist parking lot or whatever emergency had become too embarrassing to admit out loud.

She had ignored the fact that I was thirty-two years old and no longer a girl she could send upstairs to change before company came over.

Then she came down the hallway carrying a blue silk dress.

It was dark and expensive-looking, still creased from the hanger, and colder than it should have been when it hit my duffel.

“Put this on,” she said.

I looked from the dress to her face.

“For what?”

“For tomorrow.”

Her hair was pinned too tightly, and there was a little tremor at the corner of her mouth that meant she had rehearsed the conversation and still knew she was doing something ugly.

“The Whitfields are refined people,” she said. “Important people. They expect elegance.”

I glanced down at the uniform in my hands.

She followed my eyes and sighed like I had made her say the hard part.

“And don’t wear that.”

She did not call it a uniform.

She did not call it what it was.

To her, it was “that,” the same way poor relatives become “those people” once a family decides it wants better company.

I had slept on dirt floors.

I had eaten dinner out of plastic bags while dust got into the corners of my mouth.

I had written my name on forms under buzzing fluorescent lights and made promises my mother had never bothered to understand.

I had come home with ribbons, scars, paperwork, and silence.

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