My dad tied the knot with my aunt just over a week after Mom passed, and at the wedding, her son whispered what he’d been hiding

 

I’m Tessa, 30F. My mom died in a car accident on a Tuesday. One moment she was driving home, the next, a cop was in our living room, and my life split in two.

The house filled with casseroles, flowers, and murmured condolences. I barely ate. I barely slept. I just… existed.

Eight days later, my dad married my aunt. Not quietly dating. Not moving on. A full wedding: rings, vows, cake, guests.

Her name was Corrine. My mom’s sister—the one who had sobbed at the funeral, the one who held my hands saying, “We’ll get through this together.” Apparently, she meant with my dad.

I was still in black when Corrine cornered me in the kitchen, flashing her engagement ring. “You should be grateful,” she said, smiling. “Your dad needs someone.”

I couldn’t speak. My brain refused to process it.

The wedding took place in our backyard—the same one where my mom planted flowers every spring. Corrine ripped them out and replaced them with folding chairs. My dad stood there, smiling, as if he hadn’t just shattered my world. And people actually came. Neighbors, church friends, offering hugs, whispering, “At least he’s not alone.”

Eight days. Eight days after my mom’s funeral.

Corrine’s son, Mason, 19, had always been quiet. That day, he looked pale, almost sick. Right before the ceremony, I hid by the side gate, trying not to throw up. Mason found me, grabbed my wrist, and pulled me behind the shed.

“Tessa,” he whispered, his face drained of color. “I need to tell you something. Right now.”

I blinked. “What?”

He swallowed hard, like it physically hurt to speak.

“Here’s what your dad is hiding from you…”

And then he said one sentence that froze me completely.

 

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