When my sister Alicia died, I was just six. The memories I have are blurry—her laugh, the scent of her lip gloss, the way she painted my nails. Years later, at twelve, I found her silver ring with a tiny blue stone. My mom said it wasn’t valuable, but to me, it was everything. I kept it close for nine years, a quiet link to the sister I barely got to know.
Then one afternoon, at a family lunch, my brother Daniel proposed to his girlfriend—using Alicia’s ring. No one asked me. No one even mentioned it. I sat there frozen, heart sinking, watching him give away the only thing I had left of her. When I confronted my mom, she dismissed me. “It’s just a ring,” she said. Just like she had all those years ago.
I eventually told Rose, Daniel’s fiancée, the truth. She listened, understood, and without hesitation, gave the ring back. “It never belonged to me,” she said. That moment meant more than anything my family had offered. To them, I was being dramatic. But to Rose, I was just a grieving sister trying to hold onto something real.
Now the ring is back on my finger. And I wonder—was I wrong? My family thinks so. But every time I look at it, I remember Alicia—not the saint on the shelf, but the sister who made me feel seen, even for a moment. If that’s wrong, then maybe I don’t want to be right.