
The church bells had faded, the reception glowed with golden light, and laughter filled the lawn.
My sister, Sophia, had just married the love of her life, Michael. Everything felt perfect—champagne glasses clinking, jazz music drifting, Sophia radiant in her ivory dress.
Then my father, Thomas, appeared beside me. His face was pale, lips pressed tight. He gripped my hand and whispered urgently, “Get in the car. Now.”
At first, I thought he was joking. But the fear in his eyes told me otherwise. “Dad, what’s happening?” I stammered as he pulled me away. Relatives called after us, but he ignored them, shoving me into his SUV. My heart pounded.
“Dad, you’re scaring me. Please tell me what’s going on!”
He stayed silent until we reached our driveway. Cutting the engine, he finally said, “There’s something I need to tell you. Something I couldn’t say back there.”
I froze as his words sank in: “Sophia shouldn’t be married to Michael. He’s not who he says he is.”
My voice shook. “What are you talking about?”
Running a hand through his graying hair, Dad explained. Two nights earlier, he’d gone to Michael’s apartment to return some tools.
In the mailbox, he found a letter addressed to Michael, signed by Rebecca Lane—my aunt, his sister, who had vanished twenty-five years ago.
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“Rebecca called him her son,” Dad said grimly. “Which makes Michael your cousin. Which means Sophia just married her cousin.”
The world tilted. I tried to argue—maybe it was another Rebecca Lane—but Dad slammed the steering wheel. “No. The letter had details only she would know. It’s her.”
Sickness twisted in my stomach. Sophia, glowing at her wedding, was blissfully unaware of the truth.
“Why didn’t you stop it?” I demanded.
His voice cracked. “I couldn’t ruin her day without proof. But you needed to know first. We have to tell her.”
That night, we sat in the kitchen, the house dark but for the clock’s faint glow. Dad slid the letter toward me, his hands trembling.
My dear Michael, I know you don’t want contact, but I cannot stay silent anymore. 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 neat signature read: Rebecca Lane.
Tears stung my eyes. “If this is true, Sophia has to know. But on her wedding night?”
“There’s never a good time,” Dad said. “But waiting makes it worse.”
At dawn, we drove to the hotel where Sophia and Michael were staying. My chest tightened as we knocked on their door. Michael opened it, still in his wrinkled tux, Sophia behind him with her hair undone, eyes glowing.
“Dad? What’s going on?” she asked.
Thomas stepped forward and handed her the letter. “Sophia, you need to read this.”
Her eyes scanned the page, widening in horror. Michael’s face drained of color.
“Michael,” she whispered, “is this true?”
His silence was answer enough. Sophia’s knees gave way, and I caught her as she collapsed.
That was the moment everything shattered. The wedding that began as the happiest day of her life ended in devastation. And as I held my sobbing sister, I knew nothing in our family would ever be the same again.