“If she met Tom,” she says, “and he didn’t mention he was married—or even if he did—I believe she could have done that.
But it wasn’t me.”
David exhales hard and sits down on the bed.
“So,” he says, looking between us, “my mom walked in on my dad and your twin, who looks exactly like you.
None of you knew who the other person really was. Now Mom thinks you’re her.”
“Pretty much,” I say.
I look at Alice.
She looks sick.
“I am so sorry,” she says. “For what she did.
For what Tom did.
For what you walked in on. I swear to you, I had nothing to do with it. But I’m still sorry.”
I study her face.
The way her hands twist together.
The way she doesn’t defend her sister, doesn’t try to paint herself as a saint, just sits with the ugliness.
She’s not the woman from that day.
Same face, different person.
David’s shoulders slump in relief. Alice covers her mouth with her hand, like she doesn’t trust it not to do something weird.
“Are you… okay with us?” David asks.
His voice is small in a way I haven’t heard in years.
I let out a breath I feel like I’ve been holding since I opened that door four years ago.
“I’m okay with you marrying someone who treats you well,” I say. “From everything I’ve seen and heard, that’s Alice.”
He nods.
“And I’m not going to punish her,” I add, “for something her sister did with my ex-husband.”
Alice laughs once, shaky.
“Thank you,” she says.
“Really.”
“I’m still angry at Tom,” I say. “And at Anna, wherever she is. But that’s my problem, not yours.”
David stands and hugs me.
“I’m sorry, Mom,” he says into my shoulder.
“I didn’t know.
If I’d known—”
“You didn’t do anything wrong,” I say. “You fell in love with someone good.
I’m glad you did.”
He sniffles and wipes his face with his sleeve like he’s 10 again.
We sit there a few more seconds, letting everything settle. The party hums on the other side of the door.
Life doesn’t pause just because your brain is exploding.
“Can we go back out there?” David asks eventually.
“I kind of want to enjoy my engagement party.”
“Yeah,” I say. “Just don’t make me do any TikTok dances.”
He snorts. “No promises.”
We step back into the living room.
People look over, then look away in that polite New York way.
Music swells. Someone hands me a drink.
Later, when it’s just the three of us in a messy apartment with empty cups and cold pizza, we talk about weddings and guest lists and whether inviting Tom is a terrible idea.
(We land on “probably, but we’ll see.”)
The woman who helped blow up my marriage is still just a blurred memory with the wrong name.
But the woman my son is marrying is Alice.
Not Anna. Not “her.”
And for the first time in a long time, the past feels like something behind me, not something sitting in the room, waiting to be recognized.
Which moment in this story made you stop and think?
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