A Pregnant Wife, A Stolen Necklace, And The Guests Who Changed Everything-habe

The first thing I remember from Jessica’s wedding morning was the smell.

Hairspray.

Gardenias.

Image

Hot coffee no one had time to drink.

The estate was already humming before 8 a.m., all polished marble and white flowers and people pretending nerves were the same thing as joy.

Outside, guests pulled into the circular driveway in shiny SUVs, and every few seconds another car door slammed hard enough to echo through the foyer.

Inside, the air felt too warm.

I stood near the mahogany entry table with one hand under my eight-month pregnant belly and the other over my mother’s diamond necklace.

It rested against my chest like a promise.

Not a decoration.

Not something borrowed.

A promise.

My mother had worn it when she married my father, back when their whole life fit into a rented apartment and a used station wagon with a cracked dashboard.

She wore it again at their fortieth anniversary dinner, when she was already sick and still insisted on putting on lipstick because my father had made reservations at the diner where they had their first date.

Three weeks before she died, she called me into her bedroom and asked me to sit beside her.

Her hands were thinner than I remembered.

Her voice was soft, but she still had that look mothers get when they are trying to hand you something bigger than the object itself.

She unclasped the necklace and put it in my palm.

“Promise me you only wear this when you remember who you are,” she said.

I promised.

I meant it.

That necklace stayed in a locked box most of the time, wrapped in the same soft cloth she had used.

I wore it for my baby shower.

I wore it on the anniversary of her death.

Read More