My parents always favored my sister, Melissa — the golden child. I was the afterthought, forgotten on birthdays, ignored on outings, and blamed for things I didn’t do. When Melissa’s popularity crumbled in high school, she turned her bitterness on me, spreading lies that my parents eagerly believed. I grew up isolated, but I focused on school and eventually earned a full scholarship out of state.
College was a fresh start. I found my voice, friends, and met Ryan — the love of my life. When we got engaged, we planned a simple wedding we could afford. Then, shockingly, my parents offered to pay — with one condition: Melissa had to walk down the aisle first, in a white dress, as if it were her wedding too.
We smiled and agreed. But Ryan had a plan.
He played along, meeting with them, pretending to manage my “difficult” behavior, and letting Melissa dictate the flowers and décor. We let them spend lavishly — all for a show that would never happen.
On our wedding day, Melissa arrived in full bridal glam, only to be stopped by security: she wasn’t on the list. As the music started, I walked down the aisle, alone and radiant. Outside, Melissa had a meltdown. My parents raged. Ryan simply said, “Must’ve been a misunderstanding.”
At the reception, we toasted with the champagne Melissa chose and cut the cake my parents paid for. The drama? Captured on video and quietly shared. Melissa’s reputation never recovered.
Days later, she sent a furious message claiming Ryan would cheat on me — with her. Ryan screenshotted it and dropped it in the family group chat. Then we turned off our phones and left for Bali.
Childhood was cruel. But the revenge? Poetic. And the future? Beautiful.