Bride Toppled Her Wedding Cake After Her Sister’s Terrifying Warning-myhoa

As I raised the knife to slice the wedding cake, my sister wrapped her arms around me, pulled me close, and breathed into my ear: “Knock it over. Now.”

The silver handle was cold in my palm.

That is the detail I remember before everything broke.

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Not the flowers.

Not the music.

Not the way two hundred people leaned forward with phones lifted, waiting for the neat little tradition where the bride and groom smile, cut the cake, feed each other one bite, and prove to the room that love can be made photogenic.

I remember the knife being cold.

I remember the smell of sugar frosting and lilies.

I remember my sister’s arms closing around me from behind like she was trying to hold my bones together.

“Knock it over,” Sarah whispered again, her breath shaking against my ear. “Now.”

For one second, I thought she was having a panic attack.

Sarah had disappeared right after the vows.

At 6:12 p.m., she had still been sitting in the front row, watching David with that narrow-eyed look she got whenever she thought a man was performing instead of speaking.

At 6:46 p.m., she texted me from across the head table.

Are you okay? His face is weird.

At 7:03 p.m., she was gone.

I noticed because Sarah was not the type of sister who vanished on my wedding night without telling me.

She was the sister who drove across town with a thermometer and ginger ale when I had the flu.

She was the sister who slept on my couch after my first breakup because she said silence was worse than crying.

She was the sister who never liked David and never pretended hard enough to fool me.

“He’s too smooth,” she told me once in my apartment kitchen, leaning against the counter while I loaded the dishwasher. “People who are kind don’t need that much polish.”

I laughed then.

I wish I had not.

David had a way of making concern look rude.

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