My Honeymoon Became A Family Trap Before We Reached The Gate-kieutrinh

The ticket was in Jacob’s hand before I understood why his sister had a suitcase.

We were three hours early for our honeymoon flight, the way I had insisted we should be, because the last thing I wanted after a week of wedding noise was to run through an airport with a half-zipped bag and a new husband behind me.

I had imagined that morning so many times that it almost felt rehearsed.

Image

We would check our bags, get coffee, laugh about how tired we were, and board the first flight of the trip I had been planning longer than I had planned the wedding.

The Alps were supposed to be our reward for getting through seating charts, family opinions, vendor calls, and a ceremony where I barely had ten private minutes with my own groom.

Then Angie stepped out of a cab behind Nora, waving at us with one hand and pulling a roller bag with the other.

At first my mind tried to make it innocent.

Maybe she was saying goodbye.

Maybe Nora was dropping something off.

Maybe there was a reason a grieving divorced woman was at the airport on the exact morning of our honeymoon with enough luggage for a long trip.

Then Angie shouted, “Surprise,” and my body knew before my brain accepted it.

Jacob did not look surprised.

Nora did not look worried.

She looked pleased, the way a person looks when a plan has finally reached the part where everyone else is supposed to stop objecting.

Angie hugged me, and I stood there with my arms half-raised, because I did not know how to hug a person who had just walked into the private doorway of my marriage.

When she pulled back, her smile flickered.

“You’re not happy to see me?” she asked.

I turned to Jacob.

I needed him to say he had no idea.

I needed him to say this had gone too far.

I needed him to choose the marriage we had made seven days earlier before I had to ask him to.

Instead, he reached into his travel folder and pulled out a new ticket.

It had Angie’s name on it.

It was connected to our reservation.

It was the kind of small white rectangle that can make a whole life feel suddenly counterfeit.

“Stop being selfish and stay quiet,” Jacob said, keeping his voice low enough to sound controlled but sharp enough for me to hear the order in it.

Nora stood beside Angie and smiled as if he had finally said what everyone polite had been avoiding.

I stared at the ticket, then at the suitcase, then at the man I had married.

He started explaining before I asked a single question.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *