My “golden-child” sister booked her wedding on my date on purpose. Our parents chose her—mom said, “You’ll understand.” I just nodded. Ten minutes before my vows, they rushed to my venue—and went pale when they realized where it really was…
My golden child sister booked her wedding on my date on purpose. Our parents chose her. Mom said, “You’ll understand.” I just nodded.
10 minutes before my vows, they rushed to my venue and went pale when they realized where it really was.
My name is Jenny Curry. I’m 31. And 6 months before my wedding, my younger sister Ashley booked hers on the exact same day as mine, June 14th, 2025. The date I had announced at Christmas dinner months earlier.
When I asked her to move it, she smiled and said the Jefferson Hotel only had that one Saturday left all year. I called the hotel myself. It was a lie. When I asked my parents to step in, my mother looked me straight in the eye and said, “You’ll understand, Jenny. Ashley’s wedding is the one people will talk about.”
She was right, just not in the way she expected.
10 minutes before my vows, my parents rushed into my venue late, breathless, and still dressed for Ashley’s black-tie reception. They thought I was getting married in some sad little hospital room. Then they walked through those doors.
My father went pale. My mother stopped cold because they had no idea what I’d really planned.
The day Ashley announced her wedding date, my wedding date, I was in the middle of a medication pass. PICU, second floor, West Wing, 7:15 p.m. I had three patients that shift. A 4-year-old post-op cardiac repair, a 7-year-old with bacterial meningitis, a 6-year-old drowning victim on a ventilator.
I felt my phone buzz in my pocket. Ignored it. Protocol.
When you’re drawing up morphine, you don’t check texts, but it kept buzzing. Group chat family thread. The one that usually went silent for weeks until Ashley had news. I finished the med pass, signed off the chart, stepped into the supply room.
47 messages.
I scrolled fast. Engagement photos, Ashley and Trevor. Her hand extended. Diamond catching the light. Congratulations pouring in. Then I saw it.
Wedding date: June 14th, 2025.
My hands went cold.
June 14. My date. The one I’d announced 8 months ago. The one I’d put a $2,500 deposit on in September. I read it again, then again.
My coworker Kesha stuck her head in. “You good?”
“Yeah,” I said. My voice sounded far away. “Just family stuff.”