There Won’t Be a Wedding “Why are you so quiet today?” Tanya asked. “We agreed: on Saturday we’d go pick out bedroom furniture. But you seem sad. What’s wrong?” Denis knew: it’s now or never. He had to say it now. “Tanya… There’s something I wanted to talk about. About the wedding.” Tanya had waited a long time for this conversation. She and Denis agreed the celebration would be simple, but she saw Denis wanted to give her a real wedding—lots of guests, photos, organisers… She’d been waiting for this talk! “No long preambles, please. I think I know what you’re about to say,” Tanya smiled. But Denis said: “Let’s postpone… Let’s postpone the wedding.” This wasn’t the conversation she’d been preparing for. “Postpone?” She was stunned. “Where’s this coming from? Why? We were just talking about sending invitations… You chose them yourself… We were deciding who to invite! Have you changed your mind about marrying me?” Like some melodrama, he’d say his feelings had faded. But Denis didn’t stick to the script. “It’s just… money’s tight just now,” he mumbled. “My salary’s delayed. We’re not managing to save. And… We’ve only lived together for six months. Isn’t that a bit soon?” “A bit soon?” Tanya spluttered. “Denis, we’ve been together three years! Three years dating and six months living together is ‘a bit soon’ for you?” Denis didn’t look frightened anymore. “Don’t start, Tanya. I don’t want an argument. It’s just… a break. I haven’t changed my mind, but a wedding’s expensive.” “Fine… Let’s just sign at the registry and celebrate with friends afterward.” “Tanya, then it won’t be a real wedding.” “Oh, so be it!” “But it was your dream…” “I’ll get over it!” He’s grasping at straws, she thought. “Tanya…” “Be honest. Has something happened? Are you not sure you love me? Or… have you met someone else? Because ‘it’s too expensive’ is not very convincing.” Denis shook his head. “No, Tanya, I swear. I just want everything to be perfect for us. Right now, I can’t give you the perfect wedding. And yes, six months… We’re still not quite used to each other yet. We need to figure out if we fit…” There was logic in his words… He sounded convincing, but Tanya’s instincts screamed. Rarely had Denis tried so hard to convince her of something. And he’d been the one who insisted they marry sooner. But she pretended to believe him. After, Denis became not just a boyfriend, but the perfect boyfriend, paying attention to little things he’d always missed before, as if making up for the canceled wedding. He’d ask what she wanted in shops… always washed up after meals himself… But he was sullen. Not just thoughtful, truly sullen, sighing at night staring at the ceiling, batting away Tanya’s questions with, “Just tired, that’s all.” Tanya tried not to press. “Later, later, later,” whispered her inner voice. A couple of weeks later, they were invited to Denis’ parents’ house. Tanya resisted for ages. She just didn’t want to go. And Denis hadn’t said a word about the wedding, but surely his parents would—awkward. But they ended up going. Of course, the wedding came up. “So, when will you finally make us happy?” his mum asked after his dad left for the TV. “We’ve already picked a banquet hall—table for twenty. What day should I book?” Denis looked just as sour as Tanya. What to book? There’d be no wedding. “Mum, we talked about this. We’ve postponed it,” he rasped. “Postponed? Why’s that? No money? Denis, why didn’t you think ahead?” After dinner, while the men inspected the never-fixed radio, Tanya went to the bathroom to tidy up. Spotless, like an operating theatre. No dust, nothing but shower gel and shampoo—his mum kept everything else in her room. Tanya always marvelled at that: how could she be bothered to carry it all in each time? Tanya dried her face and listened… The bathroom walls carried sound, especially secrets. Denis had returned to the kitchen and was talking to his mum. Tanya heard… “…Denis, are you planning to break it off with Tanya?” Tanya froze, towel to her chin. What? She didn’t pretend it was imagination. She pressed her ear gently to the tile so as not to make a sound. “Mum, I told you. We’ve postponed, but haven’t broken up.” “Postponed is an excuse!” hissed Galina Sergeyevna. “I see how you suffer. Why do you need her? She’s not wife material. A wife should obey her husband, but this one… Why marry if you’ll just divorce in a year?” “I love her, Mum,” Denis said. Tanya almost melted. But his mum’s next words chased away any sentimentality. “You love her? She’s a sly one, Denis. I told you! She’s turning you against us already, and you’re not even married yet. You’ve stopped helping your sister, you’ve stopped visiting the dacha… She’s changing you, and not for the better.” Tanya was glued to the wall, ear to the cold tile. Turning him against them? When? She’d always been as polite as possible to his parents, even when Anatoly Petrovich trashed her new haircut. It hurt, but she kept quiet! She couldn’t remember once purposefully turning Denis against them. If anything, she always encouraged him to keep close—they were important to him. And then it dawned on her: the postponement wasn’t about money. It was his dear mother, lying to her face, who was against the wedding! Tanya hurried back to the kitchen. “Oh, Tanya’s out! We were just saying, it’s best not to delay the registry. Youth is lovely, but I don’t approve of life without a marriage certificate.” How sweet of her. “Absolutely, Mrs Wilson,” Tanya replied. “We won’t wait too much longer. Once we save up, straight to the registry, isn’t that right, Denis?” “Yes, Tanya, you can say we’re practically married,” he agreed. That night, driving home, Denis tried to put his arm around her, but Tanya kept edging away. She didn’t know how to start the conversation. Should she even ask? If Denis hadn’t left her for his parents’ sake, then he must love her… But he’d still cancelled the wedding. “You acted strange when your mum started talking,” she said, watching the city lights disappear behind them. “Me? No, she’s just pushing for a wedding and…” “Don’t lie. She’s not pushing for a wedding. She’s firmly against it. She said I’ve turned you against her. And wants us to break up.” Denis nervously jerked the steering wheel. “So you heard? Tanya, Mum’s just scared her boy will get married and forget her. Classic. Don’t let it get to you. She’ll calm down.” Tanya wasn’t much hurt by a mother who couldn’t let go of her son. What hurt was Denis himself. He hadn’t defended her—just agreed with his mother to avoid conflict. The wedding question left unsolved, Denis stayed as sour as ever, but now, when Tanya hinted at the future, he always answered: “Maybe later…” Then Tanya happened upon Denis’ unlocked phone. “I’m just checking the time,” she told herself. “I won’t read messages. Just take a peek…” The last notification was from his sister Vera. Vera was just two years younger than Tanya, but acted like she was twelve. No work, no uni, living with the parents, entirely at their expense. The message was no riddle: “I get it, I’ll never see that money. She’s got you under the thumb again. Live with her, if some girl is more important than family.” Tanya reread it. “Under the thumb again.” And suddenly, she remembered… Before the cancelled wedding, Vera had phoned Denis begging for money yet again, and Tanya, unable to hold back, had said: “Denis, she’s twenty-seven, still living off your parents, and now wants your money for fun? Maybe she should get a job? Our budget isn’t bottomless.” She’d not have interfered, but she earned as much as Denis and hadn’t agreed to support his family. Denis had reluctantly agreed then—”yes, you’re right, Tanya. It’s time to stop.” Now it was clear who was turning the family against her. She picked up Denis’ phone, copied the chat with Vera, and sent it to her own number. Then set the phone precisely where it had been. Just then, Denis brushed snow off in the hallway. “Got the milk, and your favourite chocolate. I was thinking, maybe we should…” “Denis,” Tanya interrupted. “Well Denis, who else were you expecting?” he joked. Tanya didn’t laugh. “What’s Vera texting you?” she asked. Denis knew to strike first if caught, so he feigned outrage: “You’ve been snooping on my phone!?” Classic defence—shift the blame. “Doesn’t matter what I did, Denis. I want you to explain. Now.” He stood there for a few seconds, his face cycling from anger to panic. “Look, Tanya, don’t take it seriously. She’s just a baby, gets upset at everything.” “Upset at what? Because I asked her to grow up?” Tanya pressed. “She’s used to being able to ask brother for money, that’s all. It’s hard to give up free money. Just forget about it.” “She turned your parents against me?” “Well… yeah,” Denis admitted. “I tried to explain, our money’s ours, Vera should stand on her own… Mum flipped out—said you’d turned me into a doormat, that I’ve abandoned family for you! But I don’t really think that…” “But you cancelled the wedding… Well. She set your family against me. Got it. I can’t deal with them. So what do you actually want? Do you want to marry me? Or are you just putting it off because you can’t say ‘no’ to your mother?” “Of course I want to marry you! Just… not yet. Maybe… later… once things calm down…” So there was her answer. “You know what, Denis—I’ve realised something. I don’t want to marry someone who isn’t sure of their feelings, who flinches every time his sister sneezes. It’s a good thing the wedding’s off.”

No Wedding After All

Saturday, 10th February

I suppose today I should write down whats happenedmaybe Ill make sense of it then.

This afternoon, as we sat in the flat, Emma noticed I wasn’t myself. Why are you so quiet today? she asked, giving me a smile. We agreed wed go look at bedroom furniture this weekend, remember? But you seem a bit down. Whats up?

I knew if I didnt speak now, I never would. It had to be now. Em I need to talk to you about the wedding.

She broke into this hopeful lookI knew shed been waiting for this. Wed agreed a small celebration, but she always knew I wanted to do the proper thing for her: guests, photos, the lot.

She grinned. No long speeches, please. I think I know what youre going to say.

But I didnt say what shed hoped. Emma, can we Can we put off the wedding for a bit?

The words hung in the air like a bad joke.

Put it off? she repeated, blindsided. Dan, what are you talking about? We were just sorting invitations, werent we? You were picking the colours! We were planning who to invite! Have you changed your mind?

She was bracing herself for the usual melodrama, thinking I was going to tell her my feelings had faded.

Instead, I mumbled, Finances are tight at the moment. My pays always late, we cant seem to save, and well, weve only lived together for half a year. Feels a bit soon, doesnt it?

Too soon? Emma choked out, stunned. Dan, weve been together for three years! Three years of a relationship and half a year sharing a flatthats too soon?

I stopped looking guilty and just looked exhausted. Come off it, Em. Lets not have a row. I havent changed my mind, but weddings cost a bomb these days.

She looked straight at me. Fine. Why dont we just sign the registry, just you and me, then do the pub with friends after?

Em, that wouldnt be the real thing, would it?

Well, to hell with the big wedding, then!

But its always been your dream

Ill get over it!

She wasnt buying my excuses.

Em

Just be honest, she said, voice sharp. Is there someone else? Or are you not sure if you still love me? Because its too expensive doesnt ring true.

I shook my head, hand on my heart. Nothing like that, Em, I swear. I just want it all to be perfect. And now isnt the right time. We havent even figured each other out properly. We should be sure were right for each other

There was sense in what I was saying, but I knew she wasnt convinced. That was always Emma: logical to her bones but with an instinct for when I was hiding something.

She pretended to accept it, at least outwardly.

After that, I went above and beyond being just a boyfriendand more the perfect partner: attending to the little things I used to miss, always asking her about what she wanted in the shops, doing the washing up. I tried making up for calling off the wedding, but I was properly gloomy. Not just thoughtful, but openly miserable, lying awake at night staring at the ceiling, swerving Emmas questions with a just tired, thats all.

Emma stopped pushing. Time will tell, she seemed to be telling herself.

A couple of weeks went by, and we got invited to my parents for lunch. Emma wasnt keen. I didnt want to talk about the wedding, and she knew Mum and Dad would ask. Awkward didnt even begin to cover it.

Still, we went.

Mum, never one to miss a trick, started on us over tea. So, when are you going to let us celebrate at last? She glanced at Dad, whod left for the living room, and added, Weve even checked out a venue for you. Room for twenty. When should I book it?

I could barely muster a polite face, and neither could Emma. What was there to book?

Mum, weve decided to put it off, I rasped.

Postponed? Whys that then? Money troubles? Dan, why didnt you think this through first?

After lunch, when Dad and I vanished to the shed to tinker hopelessly with the broken radio, Emma went to the bathroom.

Mum keeps her bathroom spotlesshonestly more hygienic than a hospital. She even brings her cosmetics from her room each time, never leaves anything behind. Emma always found that hilarious.

While Emma towelled her face, she overheard mum and me through the bathroom wallthose old Victorian pipes carry every word: Dan, are you going to break things off with Emma? Mum asked.

Emma froze.

I went, No, Mum. Weve just postponed it. Were not breaking up.

Mum hissed, Thats an excuse! I can see youre miserable. Shes not your wife, Dan. A wife should listen to her husband, and she never does! Why get married if youll be divorced a year from now?

I said, I love her, Mum.

Emma said later the next bit made her want to cry, then want to storm out.

Mum went on: Love her, do you? Shes a sly one, Dan! Shes had you turned against all of us since the start. You stopped helping your sister, you never visit your Nan, its all because of her. Honestly, shes changing you, and not for the better.

Emma nearly dropped the towel. Shed always made the effort with my mum and dadeven when Dad called her new haircut ridiculous, she just smiled along.

She never tried to pull me away from them; if anything, shed encourage me to visit, knowing how much my family meant. And then it dawned on her: postponing the wedding, it wasnt about money. It was about Mum. She was just too polite to put it so bluntly.

Emma soon came out. Mum switched straight back to being sweet as apple pie: Emma, dear, we were just saying, dont put things off too long! I know youre young, but you should get a move on with the formalities!

Emma replied, Absolutely, Mrs Brown. We wont wait forever. Once weve saved up a bit, well be round the registry. Isnt that right, Dan?

Oh yes, were practically married already, love, I said, doing my best.

On the way home, I tried to hold Emmas hand, but she recoiled. Neither of us spoke for a while, just the streetlights zipping past through the window.

Finally she said, You were acting strange when your mum brought up the wedding.

Me? II just think she wants us to get on with it, thats all.

No, Dan. She doesnt want us to get married at all. She told you Ive turned you against them. She wants us to break up.

I gripped the steering wheel. So you heard? Emma, shes just worried shes losing her little boy. Shell calm down.

Emma wasnt upset about Mumshe was upset about me. The problem, Dan, is you didnt stand up for me. You just let her get on with it.

After that, whenever I hinted at wedding plans, Dan would mutter, Maybe next time

One evening, I was alone in the flat when Dan left his phone unlocked on the coffee table. Ill just check the time, Emma told herself. She couldnt help herself, just one little peek.

The latest message was from Lizzie, Dans younger sister. Lizzies not much younger than me, but acts like a teenager, still lives at home, doesnt study or work, always after a handout.

The message said it all:

So Im not getting any money again then. Shes got you on a leash. Fine, stay with her if shes worth more to you than family.

Emma read it twice: on a leash.

She rememberedbefore the cancelled wedding, Lizzie had rung Dan yet again for a bit of pocket money. Id snapped: Dan, shes twenty-seven, living off your parents, still coming to you for cash to go out. Maybe its time she stood up on her own two feet? Weve got a budget, and thats both our money.

Dan had agreed then. But now it was obviousLizzie had turned the whole family against me.

Emma copied Lizzies message to her own phone as proof, just in case. Then she put Dans phone back, exactly where it was.

As Dan bustled through the door with a bag of shopping, grinning, Got your favourite chocolate, Em, the one with hazelnutsfancy a

Dan, Emma cut in.

What? Expecting someone else? he joked.

Emma didnt smile. Whats all this Lizzie writes you?

Dan instantly got defensive: Were you checking my phone while I was out?!

Nice try, mate. Doesnt matter what I was doing. I want you to explain.

He stood there, every emotion flickering across his face before settling into resignation.

Oh, Em. Shes just sulking, ignore her.

Sulking about what? That I told her to act like an adult?

Dan shrugged. Shes used to me bailing her out. Shell have to get over it.

Did she wind your parents up too?

He dropped his gaze. Yeah. I tried to explain its our money, that Lizzie needs to grow up. But Mum went madEmmas made you ignore your family, youve chosen her over us! But, Em, thats not how I see it.

But you cancelled our wedding So, its clear now. Your familys against me, and I cant build a life with them. But I need to know, Danwhat do you want? Do you want to marry me, or are you just too scared to say no to your mother?

He didnt reply for ages. I do want to marry you, Em just not right now. After things calm down, maybe

Well, there it was. The answer I didnt want.

So I said what needed saying: You know, Dan, Ive realised something. I dont want to marry someone who isnt sure of mewho flinches every time his sister throws a strop. In hindsight, its a relief we called it off.

*What Ive learned: no big day is worth it if the person youd marry lets others make his choices. Its better to hold out for someone ready to fight for a life with younot for approval from everyone else.*So I packed an overnight bag and left, quietly, without a storm or slammed doors. Just a note on the kitchen counter: Dont wait up. I owe myself a night off.

At Sarahs spare room, I texted my mum to let her know I was coming for Sunday dinneron my own. There was relief in just the idea of it: laughter with my own family, no tension about who I was allowed to love.

Dan didnt call until midnight. I let it ring out. His second voicemail was shorter: Im sorry. I just I dont know how to do this. For once, I wasnt the one left uncertain.

I didnt cry. Instead, I lay in Sarahs guest bed and stared at the ceiling, finally admitting I wasnt the villain in his familys story, nor the hero in ours. Id simply wanted a life I didnt have to apologise for, or defend. One that started with two people in a room, both knowing the same quiet truth.

Maybe there would be another wedding one day, somewhere far from anyones expectations. Or maybe there wouldnt. Either way, I smiled to myself, knowing the best kind of freedom isnt walking down an aisle, but knowing you can walk awaywith your head held high, and your heart finally at rest.

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There Won’t Be a Wedding “Why are you so quiet today?” Tanya asked. “We agreed: on Saturday we’d go pick out bedroom furniture. But you seem sad. What’s wrong?” Denis knew: it’s now or never. He had to say it now. “Tanya… There’s something I wanted to talk about. About the wedding.” Tanya had waited a long time for this conversation. She and Denis agreed the celebration would be simple, but she saw Denis wanted to give her a real wedding—lots of guests, photos, organisers… She’d been waiting for this talk! “No long preambles, please. I think I know what you’re about to say,” Tanya smiled. But Denis said: “Let’s postpone… Let’s postpone the wedding.” This wasn’t the conversation she’d been preparing for. “Postpone?” She was stunned. “Where’s this coming from? Why? We were just talking about sending invitations… You chose them yourself… We were deciding who to invite! Have you changed your mind about marrying me?” Like some melodrama, he’d say his feelings had faded. But Denis didn’t stick to the script. “It’s just… money’s tight just now,” he mumbled. “My salary’s delayed. We’re not managing to save. And… We’ve only lived together for six months. Isn’t that a bit soon?” “A bit soon?” Tanya spluttered. “Denis, we’ve been together three years! Three years dating and six months living together is ‘a bit soon’ for you?” Denis didn’t look frightened anymore. “Don’t start, Tanya. I don’t want an argument. It’s just… a break. I haven’t changed my mind, but a wedding’s expensive.” “Fine… Let’s just sign at the registry and celebrate with friends afterward.” “Tanya, then it won’t be a real wedding.” “Oh, so be it!” “But it was your dream…” “I’ll get over it!” He’s grasping at straws, she thought. “Tanya…” “Be honest. Has something happened? Are you not sure you love me? Or… have you met someone else? Because ‘it’s too expensive’ is not very convincing.” Denis shook his head. “No, Tanya, I swear. I just want everything to be perfect for us. Right now, I can’t give you the perfect wedding. And yes, six months… We’re still not quite used to each other yet. We need to figure out if we fit…” There was logic in his words… He sounded convincing, but Tanya’s instincts screamed. Rarely had Denis tried so hard to convince her of something. And he’d been the one who insisted they marry sooner. But she pretended to believe him. After, Denis became not just a boyfriend, but the perfect boyfriend, paying attention to little things he’d always missed before, as if making up for the canceled wedding. He’d ask what she wanted in shops… always washed up after meals himself… But he was sullen. Not just thoughtful, truly sullen, sighing at night staring at the ceiling, batting away Tanya’s questions with, “Just tired, that’s all.” Tanya tried not to press. “Later, later, later,” whispered her inner voice. A couple of weeks later, they were invited to Denis’ parents’ house. Tanya resisted for ages. She just didn’t want to go. And Denis hadn’t said a word about the wedding, but surely his parents would—awkward. But they ended up going. Of course, the wedding came up. “So, when will you finally make us happy?” his mum asked after his dad left for the TV. “We’ve already picked a banquet hall—table for twenty. What day should I book?” Denis looked just as sour as Tanya. What to book? There’d be no wedding. “Mum, we talked about this. We’ve postponed it,” he rasped. “Postponed? Why’s that? No money? Denis, why didn’t you think ahead?” After dinner, while the men inspected the never-fixed radio, Tanya went to the bathroom to tidy up. Spotless, like an operating theatre. No dust, nothing but shower gel and shampoo—his mum kept everything else in her room. Tanya always marvelled at that: how could she be bothered to carry it all in each time? Tanya dried her face and listened… The bathroom walls carried sound, especially secrets. Denis had returned to the kitchen and was talking to his mum. Tanya heard… “…Denis, are you planning to break it off with Tanya?” Tanya froze, towel to her chin. What? She didn’t pretend it was imagination. She pressed her ear gently to the tile so as not to make a sound. “Mum, I told you. We’ve postponed, but haven’t broken up.” “Postponed is an excuse!” hissed Galina Sergeyevna. “I see how you suffer. Why do you need her? She’s not wife material. A wife should obey her husband, but this one… Why marry if you’ll just divorce in a year?” “I love her, Mum,” Denis said. Tanya almost melted. But his mum’s next words chased away any sentimentality. “You love her? She’s a sly one, Denis. I told you! She’s turning you against us already, and you’re not even married yet. You’ve stopped helping your sister, you’ve stopped visiting the dacha… She’s changing you, and not for the better.” Tanya was glued to the wall, ear to the cold tile. Turning him against them? When? She’d always been as polite as possible to his parents, even when Anatoly Petrovich trashed her new haircut. It hurt, but she kept quiet! She couldn’t remember once purposefully turning Denis against them. If anything, she always encouraged him to keep close—they were important to him. And then it dawned on her: the postponement wasn’t about money. It was his dear mother, lying to her face, who was against the wedding! Tanya hurried back to the kitchen. “Oh, Tanya’s out! We were just saying, it’s best not to delay the registry. Youth is lovely, but I don’t approve of life without a marriage certificate.” How sweet of her. “Absolutely, Mrs Wilson,” Tanya replied. “We won’t wait too much longer. Once we save up, straight to the registry, isn’t that right, Denis?” “Yes, Tanya, you can say we’re practically married,” he agreed. That night, driving home, Denis tried to put his arm around her, but Tanya kept edging away. She didn’t know how to start the conversation. Should she even ask? If Denis hadn’t left her for his parents’ sake, then he must love her… But he’d still cancelled the wedding. “You acted strange when your mum started talking,” she said, watching the city lights disappear behind them. “Me? No, she’s just pushing for a wedding and…” “Don’t lie. She’s not pushing for a wedding. She’s firmly against it. She said I’ve turned you against her. And wants us to break up.” Denis nervously jerked the steering wheel. “So you heard? Tanya, Mum’s just scared her boy will get married and forget her. Classic. Don’t let it get to you. She’ll calm down.” Tanya wasn’t much hurt by a mother who couldn’t let go of her son. What hurt was Denis himself. He hadn’t defended her—just agreed with his mother to avoid conflict. The wedding question left unsolved, Denis stayed as sour as ever, but now, when Tanya hinted at the future, he always answered: “Maybe later…” Then Tanya happened upon Denis’ unlocked phone. “I’m just checking the time,” she told herself. “I won’t read messages. Just take a peek…” The last notification was from his sister Vera. Vera was just two years younger than Tanya, but acted like she was twelve. No work, no uni, living with the parents, entirely at their expense. The message was no riddle: “I get it, I’ll never see that money. She’s got you under the thumb again. Live with her, if some girl is more important than family.” Tanya reread it. “Under the thumb again.” And suddenly, she remembered… Before the cancelled wedding, Vera had phoned Denis begging for money yet again, and Tanya, unable to hold back, had said: “Denis, she’s twenty-seven, still living off your parents, and now wants your money for fun? Maybe she should get a job? Our budget isn’t bottomless.” She’d not have interfered, but she earned as much as Denis and hadn’t agreed to support his family. Denis had reluctantly agreed then—”yes, you’re right, Tanya. It’s time to stop.” Now it was clear who was turning the family against her. She picked up Denis’ phone, copied the chat with Vera, and sent it to her own number. Then set the phone precisely where it had been. Just then, Denis brushed snow off in the hallway. “Got the milk, and your favourite chocolate. I was thinking, maybe we should…” “Denis,” Tanya interrupted. “Well Denis, who else were you expecting?” he joked. Tanya didn’t laugh. “What’s Vera texting you?” she asked. Denis knew to strike first if caught, so he feigned outrage: “You’ve been snooping on my phone!?” Classic defence—shift the blame. “Doesn’t matter what I did, Denis. I want you to explain. Now.” He stood there for a few seconds, his face cycling from anger to panic. “Look, Tanya, don’t take it seriously. She’s just a baby, gets upset at everything.” “Upset at what? Because I asked her to grow up?” Tanya pressed. “She’s used to being able to ask brother for money, that’s all. It’s hard to give up free money. Just forget about it.” “She turned your parents against me?” “Well… yeah,” Denis admitted. “I tried to explain, our money’s ours, Vera should stand on her own… Mum flipped out—said you’d turned me into a doormat, that I’ve abandoned family for you! But I don’t really think that…” “But you cancelled the wedding… Well. She set your family against me. Got it. I can’t deal with them. So what do you actually want? Do you want to marry me? Or are you just putting it off because you can’t say ‘no’ to your mother?” “Of course I want to marry you! Just… not yet. Maybe… later… once things calm down…” So there was her answer. “You know what, Denis—I’ve realised something. I don’t want to marry someone who isn’t sure of their feelings, who flinches every time his sister sneezes. It’s a good thing the wedding’s off.”