When I first met Emily, I knew—without logic or reason—that she was the woman I wanted to spend my life with. She walked into the office like a quiet breeze, radiating calm and warmth. That same peace soon became the foundation of our relationship.
Three years later, we were planning our wedding. Everyone adored Emily. Everyone except her stepmother, Margaret.
Margaret had a way of cloaking cruelty in casual remarks. When she saw the ring I gave Emily, she asked if the diamond was “real or one of those lab-grown knockoffs.” She insisted on being involved in the wedding planning, not to help, but to criticize.
“Oh, Emily,” she’d say with a smirk, “do you really need such a big venue? You don’t have that many friends.”
She mocked the wedding dress, calling it cheap and suggesting it would look better on someone with “a more flattering figure.”