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Can You Believe It? You Left Susan for This Ordinary Girl? I Refuse to Bless This Marriage!

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Let me describe to you the peculiar dream I once had about my brother and his winding romantic life. In the dream, he had been seeing a young woman named Charlotte for nearly a year. She shimmered with an otherworldly beauty, always turned out in the latest London fashions, her conversations swirling with cleverness and wit. She seemed able to charm anyone she encounteredeven I found myself drawn to her, often joining Charlotte for endless walks down cobbled Oxford alleys or sitting together in snug, lamp-lit cafés where we watched people flow past like autumn leaves.

Charlottes world was full of extravagant characters and a whirl of glittering parties. She worked at a well-known advertising firm along the Thames, zipped around in her own Mini Cooper, always predicting the next trend before the rest of England caught on. Our family started weaving future daydreams around her, certain that one day Charlotte would become my brothers bride, and our lives would merge into one shining tableau. Yet dream logic rarely abides by anyones script. My brother and Charlotte parted ways, their laughter echoing briefly before fading. Our friendship with Charlotte ebbed away along with her.

With the odd speed only found in dreams, less than a month later my brother appeared with someone new. He introduced us to Alice, announcing that they would soon be wed. Alice was altogether unlike Charlottequiet, almost invisible, dressed plainly in jeans and a loose jumper, cheeks flushed with shyness. She nursed an empty plate at dinner, hardly uttering a word, her fork poised in midair as though expecting it to float away. I remember a rising thought: surely my brother was happiest around luminous, talkative women?

My mother, stern as an old oak tree, took an instant dislike to Alice. She was put off by Alices hush; conversation felt forced, and an unspoken silence lingered over every meal. Alice lacked a university degreea stain in Mums eyesand came from a modest family in the English countryside. She wore her plainness like an aged coat, and Mum could not help but remark that Alice seemed to dress decades older than she truly was.

But my brother held fast against the current of my mothers opinions. He declared, with a surreal firmness, that hed leave our house if Alice was not welcomed. Persistently, the two marriedby contract as one might expect in a dreamand began spinning their own reality under a tidy, golden-tiled roof. Over time, Alice warmed to us, her laughter peeking out from behind the silence. Their homealways gleaming, always filled with the comforting scent of roast and puddingbecame a place of gentle warmth. Mum, at last, recognised the glow in Alices eyes for her son and began to see a daughter in her.

Only a few days ago, as if summoned by stray thoughts, I ran into Charlotte in the twisting lanes of Covent Garden. She floated toward me on designer heels, asking after the family. Still, she seemed caught in a merry-go-round of shopping, collecting expensive things and never whispering of the future. As I considered both daughters-in-law, I realised Alice was truly my brothers best choice; Charlotte was too enamoured with her reflection, forever lost in the gilt mirrors of department stores. Im grateful for how things unfolded, though I do regret my chilly apprehension toward Alice in those early days.

In the end, everything settled into a peaceful pattern. Alice now awaits the birth of their first child, and as a family, we dream together about welcoming this new soul into our peculiar, lovely circle.

What can one say except that, in the end, the dream found its own strange sense of rightness?

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