The Night Before My Wedding, My Parents Decided I Was Easier to Humiliate Than to Love.-luna

By the time I sat up in bed, the shadow at the foot of my mattress had already moved.

The garment bag gave a soft, sickening rustle.

For one frozen second, I could not make my body understand what my eyes were seeing.

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Then the bedside lamp clicked on by itself as my hand slammed into the switch, and the shape in front of me turned into my mother.

She was standing there in her nightgown, face pale, lips tight, holding the zipper of my garment bag like she had every right in the world.

“What are you doing?” I whispered.

She did not answer right away.

That silence told me everything before she ever opened her mouth.

My father appeared behind her in the doorway, still fully dressed, one hand on the frame like he had been waiting for a performance to begin.

Tyler was there too, half-hidden in the hall, looking more guilty than surprised.

My stomach dropped so hard it felt like I might be sick.

My mother lifted her chin and said, “We are fixing what you were too stubborn to see.”

I looked at the open bag.

The fabric inside was wrong.

One of my dresses had been pulled out of its cover and dropped back in badly folded, like somebody had handled it without care.

My hands started shaking so hard I had to grip the edge of the mattress.

“Step away from my things,” I said.

My father let out a short breath through his nose.

“Your things?” he said. “Everything in this house has always been our things.”

That old sentence hit harder than the threat in his voice.

Because it was the kind of thing parents say when they want you to remember you have never truly belonged.

My mother stepped toward the bed and pulled the bag wider open.

The white satin dress was there, but the seam near the waist had been torn.

Not ripped by accident.

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