A Ski Selfie Exposed The Guest List My Family Tried To Hide From Me-myhoa

I learned about my brother’s engagement party from a cousin’s mirror selfie.

Angela was standing in her bedroom with a blue dress in one hand and a green one in the other, asking the internet which one she should wear to Jason and Megan’s big engagement bash.

I stared at the words until they stopped looking like English.

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Jason was my little brother, the boy who used to sneak into my room during thunderstorms, the kid I taught to ride a bike while our parents were busy being important.

I had flown home for his graduation, sent him care packages during exam weeks, and kept every awkward promise two siblings make when distance starts turning love into scheduling.

But nobody had told me he was having an engagement party that weekend.

I checked my email first, because denial likes a practical chore.

Then I checked my spam folder, my physical mail, my voicemail, and the family group chat where my mother posted recipes nobody made.

There was nothing.

My mother answered on the fourth ring and used the bright voice she saved for uncomfortable lies.

She told me it had come together quickly, that Megan’s grandmother had a medical appointment next month, that Jason had probably meant to call.

When I asked if I was invited, she went quiet long enough for the answer to arrive before her words did.

My father was colder.

Richard Matthews had built a career on sounding reasonable while making people feel foolish, and he used that voice on his own daughter.

“It is just a reunion, Cassandra,” he said.

He told me not to make a big deal out of nothing, as if my brother’s engagement party were a neighborhood potluck I had misunderstood.

After I hung up, I started looking.

My aunt was getting her hair done for the big night, my cousin Tyler was complaining about wearing a suit, and one of my old high school friends had posted that she could not wait to celebrate Jason and Megan.

That was when the room got very still around me.

The guest list was not small.

It was selective.

I left Jason a voicemail that sounded calmer than I felt.

He did not call back.

He texted that he was busy with work and wedding stuff, and those six words told me he already knew I was standing outside the circle.

I almost canceled the ski trip.

The weekend in Breckenridge had been on my calendar for months, but grief makes a dramatic argument for staying in bed.

My friend Dana told me to pack anyway, because sitting alone in Denver while my family pretended I did not exist would only make their decision bigger.

So I went.

The mountains were clean and bright in a way that made my thoughts feel less crowded.

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