Chapter One
April 2019
It was totally normalto be terrified the day of your own wedding, right?
Maybeterrifiedwasn’t the right word. Mandy was nervous. Anxious.
Petrified.
Her stomach seemed to shimmy its way further and further into her chest as she sat alone in her private hotel suite, staring at the long gown hanging from the curtain rod. All Mandy had to do was slip into the first—and last—white dress she would ever wear. Well, that and do her makeup and get her hair done and about a million other things. But she hesitated. More specifically, she couldn’t move even if she wanted to. Had she really been so lucky not only to find the love of her life, but also to be getting married?
This was a good thing. Something she’d always wanted.
And now, she was mere hours away from walking down anaisle sprinkled with rose petals in various shades of pink—why couldn’t she breathe?
No.
Today was going to be fine.
Better than fine.
She took a deep sip from the coffee mug death-gripped in her hand, the steam fogging her vision as she continued to stare at her dress. There wasn’t anything particularly extraordinary about the garment hanging there. It was simple, understated—except for the small train. It was definitely not something Mandy was used to picking out. She had always been known for her affection for black—or shades of black—in all her clothing choices, but that day, as she stood on the little podium in front of the three-way mirrors and felt the buttery silk lining caressing her skin as she was zipped inside the cream-colored gown, she never wanted to take it off. Except now, putting it on seemed impossible.
Or maybe it was thattodayseemed impossible.
On the surface, it all seemed simple—small tasks she needed to complete to get to her moment of walking down that aisle—but there was nothing simple about getting married.
It wasn’t that she thought she was making the wrong choice. No, that wasn’t it at all. This was a day Mandy had dreamed about for years—even decades, if she thought hard enough about it. The lace dress hanging on its satin hanger. The pink and white peonies tied together with gold ribbon. The light blue Chuck Taylors withI DOwritten on the soles. They were all a part of this perfect vision she had for herself on this day, and they were all waiting for her.
Soon over two hundred people would be waiting for her too. But here—now—in this hotel room, it was Mandy alone with herthoughts. And this, being alone, stirred memories inside her belly like ice cubes in a blender, sending gooseflesh rippling all over her skin. She’d kill for a margarita right about now. The hotel minibar was looking quite tempting—even at fifty dollars a miniature bottle—not as small as the airplane ones, but also not full-size, completely overpriced, and a terrible choice this early in the day…even if it would dull the nerves raging inside her.
Mandy had been in love more times than she wanted to count. Her heart had been broken just as many. Would this wedding mark the last time she’d put her whole soul into someone? Or was this the inevitable beginning of the end, and she’d be left scooping up the shattered pieces of her heart yet again? Mandy both knew it was different this time and struggled with the sense of impending doom as if the other shoe—a black Chuck withI DON’Temblazoned on the bottom—was about to drop and crush all the dreams she’d been constructing for as long as she could remember.
These werenotthe kinds of thoughts someone should have on their wedding day, but they spun through her mind and stuck like melted marshmallow. A cobweb of white gooey uncertainty that she needed to clean away.
The Belgian waffle she special-ordered sat untouched in front of Mandy as she took another long drink of her coffee and watched the pulp in her orange juice drift to the bottom of her glass. Edmund hated fresh-squeezed orange juice, said juice should be sipped and never chewed, but Mandy loved to catch the little bulbs of fruit flesh between her teeth and bite down. Little explosions, like nature’s Pop Rocks. But she couldn’t bring herself to drink it today, or even take a bite. Instead, she alternatedbetween staring at her dress and staring at the uninspired artwork hanging on the wall. It was the basic bulk buy most hotels did—some cheap reproduction they put in a gaudy frame in an attempt to make it look expensive. Mandy could’ve painted something better with her eyes closed.
Thankfully the bed was comfortable enough, and the coffee was hot—unlike her shower. She tried to convince herself it wasn’t a sign of how things would go today. But the fact that she had woken up late, and the icy water, and then room service forgot the bacon with her order, well, things weren’t off to a great start. She sat in the hotel-issued bathrobe, towel wrapped around her wet hair, trying to get warm—willing herself to believe all those things were not omens or harbingers of doom, and that they, in fact, had nothing to do with each other. They were all just flukes. One-offs. Not the universe’s way of preparing her for what was to come. She really should go down to the desk and complain, but that would be one more thing to add to Mandy’s to-do list, and she couldn’t move.
Why was there this great importance placed on weddings anyway? One day in a relationship blown out of proportion compared to all the other days a couple proved their commitment and love for each other. Why today and not last Tuesday? Not to say that Mandy hadn’t bought into the hype. Hell, shewasthe hype. Teen Mandy could’ve looked at bridal magazines for hours. Adult Mandy just had to have the ever-fashionable s’mores bar at her reception complete with miniature chalkboard signs that named each individual ingredient even though it was an additional charge. Add-on packages were Mandy’s Achilles’ heel. They were literally made for her. She needed everything to be perfect. But why? And for whom?
It was just a day, wasn’t it?
Marriage was for a lifetime, right?
“The Imperial March” blasted from Mandy’s cell, and she quickly swept it up. “Yes, I’m up, and I have food.”
“Good,” her mom said. “We don’t want you passing out during your vows.”
“That can’t really happen, can it?” There was a reason Mom’s ringtone was what it was. Mandy’s mother was the queen of giving others just one more thing to worry about. If Mandy actually made it down the aisle without slipping on one of the rose petals, now there was a possibility she’d end up on the ground in a dead faint, embarrassing herself more than she had in the fifth-grade talent show, andthatwas beyond humiliating. How many people there would be repeat audience members? Isa would laugh her ass off. Aunt Mary would snap the world’s worst candids that would haunt Mandy at every family event from now until the end of time.
“Not if you eat something.” Mom tried to sound reassuring, but once the anxiety train got rolling down Mandy’s track, there was little that could slow it. “Have you talked to Isa today?” It was like Mom knew exactly what Mandy needed. Her best friend. The person she’d been able to count on for anything and everything since kindergarten. Just hearing her name seemed to calm the swarming hornets in Mandy’s stomach.
“I texted her, but she’s probably not awake yet.” Mandy used the side of her fork to slice off a piece of waffle, dipped it in the now-cold maple syrup, and shoved it into her mouth. She was not fainting today. No way. No how.
“Well, I’m sure you’ll hear from her soon.”
Mandy hoped. Isa was the only one who would be able toconvince Mandy she was just being silly with her thoughts of “signs from the universe.” “You picked up the programs from the printer, right? And have the box of favors to give to the caterer? Oh, and did you get a chance to call—”