When my dad called to invite my 12-year-old brother Owen and me to his wedding, I thought the hardest part would be watching him marry the woman who tore our family apart. I had no idea Owen had something unforgettable planned. I’m Tessa, 25, still trying to figure life out after seeing my family fall apart. Owen used to be the sweetest kid—always drawing pictures for our mom and crying at cartoons. But after Dad cheated on Mom with Dana, his perfect coworker, something inside him shifted.
Mom caught them one afternoon. She dropped a plant she’d just bought, and I swear something inside her broke that day, too. She begged Dad to make it work, went to therapy alone, wrote him letters, even folded his laundry trying to save 22 years of marriage. But none of it mattered. Dad moved in with Dana three weeks after filing for divorce. One night, Owen asked me in the dark, “Does Dad love her more than us?” I didn’t have a good answer.
A year later, Dad invited us to his wedding with Dana. We refused. But our grandparents pressured us: “Be the bigger person,” they said, until Owen finally agreed. Two weeks before the wedding, Owen asked me to order itching powder on Amazon. I didn’t ask questions—I had a feeling. Maybe I wanted someone to feel a little pain for what Mom had gone through. On the wedding day, Owen offered to hang Dana’s white jacket. She smiled, thanked him, and handed it over. He came back out as calm as ever.
When the ceremony started, Dana looked flawless. But a few minutes in, she began scratching—first her arms, then her neck. By the time they reached the vows, she was frantically scratching, twitching, tugging at her jacket. She ran inside mid-ceremony, red and miserable. She came back out in a rumpled dress, trying to laugh it off, but the mood was ruined. Dad was confused. “What even happened?” he asked me. “Maybe detergent?” I shrugged. Driving home, Owen finally said, “She didn’t cry. But she’ll remember today. Like Mom remembers that day forever.” Now, Dad isn’t speaking to us. Dana’s family calls us evil. But I haven’t apologized. Because I didn’t plan it. I just didn’t stop it. Maybe that makes me wrong. But I’m not sorry.