She Hid Her Army Uniform For Her Sister’s Wedding. Then The Prince Arrived-mdue - Chainityai

She Hid Her Army Uniform For Her Sister’s Wedding. Then The Prince Arrived-mdue

The bridesmaid dress scratched Mireya Aldridge’s collarbone every time she breathed.

It smelled faintly like hairspray, hotel carpet, and the expensive floral spray her sister had ordered for the bridal suite.

The chiffon was pale blush, soft enough to photograph well and stiff enough to remind Mireya every time she moved that she was wearing someone else’s idea of who she should be.

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Three feet away, hanging from the closet door, was the uniform she had brought anyway.

Dark blue.

Pressed sharp.

Brass buttons polished until they caught the late-morning light from the hotel window.

Her ribbons sat in a neat row inside the garment bag.

Above the pocket was the medical badge she had earned twelve years into an Army career her family treated like an awkward phase that had gone on too long.

Mireya reached for the zipper, then stopped.

The last time she wore that uniform to a family event, her mother had smiled too hard and said, “Maybe next time wear something softer, honey. People get intimidated.”

People.

She meant her friends.

She meant donors, neighbors, cousins, and anyone else who might ask questions that pulled attention away from Brielle.

That had been the rule in their family since they were girls.

Brielle was the story.

Mireya was the useful one in the background, the one who fixed things, carried things, arrived early, stayed late, and did not make anyone uncomfortable by having a life that did not orbit the family living room.

When Mireya enlisted, her father had called it a phase.

When she made sergeant, her mother said she hoped the work was not hard on her skin.

When she deployed, Brielle had asked if she could mail wedding magazines to her address because the postage would be cheaper through military channels.

Mireya still sent back souvenirs for Brielle anyway.

A scarf.

A little carved box.

A silver charm from a base exchange gift shop because Brielle liked shiny things.

That was what made the morning sting.

It was not only the dress.

It was the long history of being useful until being visible became inconvenient.

A knock landed on the door, but Brielle came in before Mireya answered.

She was already in a white silk robe with her initials embroidered over the pocket, her blond hair pinned into glossy curls.

Her engagement ring flashed so aggressively beneath the chandelier that it looked like it was trying to signal an aircraft.

She looked Mireya over and smiled.

“Good,” Brielle said. “You changed.”

Mireya kept her hand near the garment bag.

“I never agreed not to wear my uniform.”

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