Margaret stepped into the aisle and looked directly at my sister. “She saved your life, and you’re asking her to hide?” she said, her voice echoing through the church. Then she turned to the guests. “Do you know why she is in that wheelchair? Do you know why she carries those scars?” One by one, heads began to shake. Emily’s face slowly lost its color.
Margaret continued, “This woman ran back into a burning house for her little sister. She carried her through fire and nearly died doing it.” A murmur swept through the church. Daniel looked from me to Emily in disbelief. “You never told me that,” he said quietly. Emily lowered her eyes, unable to answer. For the first time, she looked ashamed instead of annoyed.
Then Daniel walked down from the altar and stopped beside my wheelchair. In front of everyone, he knelt and took my gloved hand. “If anyone should have the seat of honor today, it’s you,” he said. He asked one of the ushers to move my chair to the front row, directly beside his mother. The entire church stood and applauded while tears streamed down my face.
When the ceremony ended, Emily came to me, still holding her bouquet. She whispered, “I spent so many years trying to forget the fire that I forgot what you gave up for me.” I looked at the tiny scar on her shoulder and then at my own hands. “I never wanted gratitude,” I told her softly. “I only wanted a sister.” She cried, and for the first time in years, she wrapped her arms around me—not the scars, not the wheelchair, just me