I Wrote My Sister’s Wedding Toast and Watched the Man I’ve Loved My Whole Life Marry Her — Then I Ran Into the Dark and Everything Changed

Part 1

I want to tell you something I’ve never said out loud.

I wrote Cole’s wedding toast.

Not because I was asked to.

Because he texted me three days before the rehearsal dinner and said: “Come on, Dana.

You know I’m hopeless at this stuff.”

And I said yes.

Because I have never, in twenty years of loving Cole Anderson, been able to say no to him.

I was eight when his family moved next door.

He knocked on our door and asked if anyone wanted to go biking.

I hated biking.

I went anyway.

That was the beginning of everything.

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I loved him with the absolute certainty of a twelve-year-old heart.

I loved him when we were teenagers and he called me at midnight to talk through his breakups.

I loved him when he asked me to proofread his college essays because he was too busy with football.

I loved him when he sat across from me one evening and said, quietly, carefully: “Would it be weird if I asked Sera out?”

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And I said: “Of course not.”

Because I had never told him.

Because I kept waiting for the right moment that never came.

Because somewhere along the way I made a decision, quietly and without naming it: that his happiness mattered more to me than my own.

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I loved him through his first date with my sister.

Through their first year together.

Through his proposal, which he described to me in detail, and which I told him was perfect.

And then I wrote his toast.

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Three pages.

The right anecdotes.

The right amount of humor.

The right promises.

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I made Cole sound like exactly the kind of man you’d want to marry.

Because he is.

That was always the worst part.

He’s a genuinely good man.

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Steady and warm and loyal.

It would have been easier if he wasn’t.

I sat in that rehearsal dinner hall and watched him stand up and read the words I’d written and watched Sera cry and watched my mother dab at her eyes and I thought: I am invisible.

I have been invisible for twenty years and no one has noticed because I make it so easy for them not to.

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I excused myself before the applause finished.

Outside, the air was cool and the sun was going down and beyond the edge of the property the pine trees started.

I told myself I would walk to the tree line and come back.

I walked into the forest instead.

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I don’t know how long I walked.

Long enough to lose the path.

Long enough for the light to fail.

Long enough to realize I had no idea where I was.

And then something moved in the dark.

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Too large for a fox.

Too quiet for a person.

Something that didn’t belong in an ordinary forest.

I curled into myself the way you do when your body takes over from your brain.

I put my arms over my face.

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I waited for whatever was going to happen to happen.

What happened was: a cold nose.

Against the back of my hand.

Gentle.

Curious.

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I lowered my arms slowly.

The wolf was white.

Enormous.

Silver threads running through its fur, which I noticed because my brain had apparently decided that observing details was better than screaming.

Its eyes were the color of glacier ice.

Not the pale blue of a bright day.

The deep, pressurized blue of something ancient.

It looked at me like it knew me.

Not like an animal looks at prey.

Like something far stranger.

Like I was something it had been searching for.

I know how that sounds.

I was terrified.

I was also, impossibly, starting to be something other than terrified.

I put my hand out.

Its fur was like silk.

Its warmth radiated into my palm.

A sound rose from deep in its chest.

Not a growl.

Something more like recognition.

“I’m Dana,” I said.

It tilted its head.

“You wouldn’t know the way back, would you?”

It turned.

Walked three deliberate steps.

Looked back at me with what I can only describe as impatience.

So I followed a giant wolf through a dark forest and it led me back to the lights of the estate and then turned and disappeared into the trees before Cole found me.

I stood at the edge of the estate and heard Cole’s voice calling my name.

And I felt two things at once:

Relief.

And a strange hollow ache.

Like I’d left something behind in the dark.

I still don’t fully understand what happened that night.

But something changed.

I’ve spent twenty years making myself invisible for a man who never asked me to.

And then something in a dark forest looked at me like I was the only thing in the world worth finding.

It doesn’t explain anything.

It doesn’t resolve anything.

But it was the first time in a long time that I felt something other than invisible.

And I’m still thinking about it.

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