Ex-Friend
Are you serious? You want to turn up to a wedding where a place at the reception costs two hundred pounds per head, and not bring a gift, just because you bought yourself a dress?
But the dress will be yours, Emma! You can wear it to a restaurant or the theatre…
I dont wear teal, Rosie. Ive told you this three times already.
Right, the bride snapped. Either you respect the dress code and behave like a normal friend, or… I dont know.
The glass on Rosies living room table shimmered and pulsed, quiet as a heartbeat, under the weight of constant group chat notifications.
Rosie tried not to glance at her phone, but the red bubble148 unread messages in an hourpressed like a migraine behind her eyes.
The chat was called “Emma’s Teal Dream.” Emmas grinning selfie in a veil crowned the icon.
At last, Rosie gave in and unlocked her mobile.
Ladies, Ive found the perfect stylist! Emma had written. Manicures must be in Seafoam polish number 312 only. No nudes, no clear coats. Thats final. And pedicures too!
My make-ups sorted: shimmering teal eyes and cats eyes liner. Appointments for make-up Friday morning, nails Thursday evening Ill send the address. Everyone pays for themselves but I got us a special deal, so its only eighty pounds each for both.
Rosie put her phone gently down.
Eighty quid for make-up and nails, which shed remove within 48 hours.
Plus one hundred twenty for that seaweed-coloured satin dress Emma had picked out for the seven bridesmaids.
A dress Rosie would never wear again, because teal turned her face that morbid, drowned-lady hue.
Total: two hundred quid, just for the look at someone elses celebration.
After two credit payments and a recent bump down in wages, Rosie had only £160 left in her account for the rest of the month.
And there was still train fare, a gift, and shoes to match that dress
Ten minutes later, Rosie rang Emma. We need to talk. About Saturday and manicures, she began.
Not this again, Emma groaned. Its all worked out. The photographer says youll all look divine teal against my white gown.
Emma, it all adds up to two hundred pounds. I dont have that kind of money. Well, technically I do, but its my last.
And you know I never do coloured nailsjust plain, tidy, always. That dress makes me look ghastly. Cant I just come in my navy one? Its smart, it was pricey, and Ive only worn it once.
Navy? Rosie, are you taking the mick? My tables have teal cloths and napkins. You want to spoil the whole effect?
I just want to be your guest, not part of the background.
If youre insisting, then fine Ill do the make-up, Ill buy the dress, but thatll be my present. Therell be nothing left for an envelope.
Are you SERIOUS? You want to come to a wedding where dinner costs two hundred pounds per person, and not even bring a present because you splashed out on a dress?
But the dress is yours to keep! Perfect for dinners out, the theatre
I dont wear teal, Emma. Ive told you three times already.
Thats it, Emma cut her short. Either you stick to the dress code and act like a decent friend or I dont know.
“Maybe you shouldnt come at all if youre going to be this stingy about the most important day of my life
Maybe I shouldnt, Rosie said quietly. Sorry.
She pressed end call and immediately left the group chat.
Her chest was tight, but alongside that ache there hovered an eerie kind of freedom.
Two hundred pounds remained hersand so did her nerves.
***
A week later, on the day of the wedding, Rosie was home with a book, deliberately off social media so she wouldnt pick at old wounds. But as evening fell, her phone rang.
The name Lucy flashed upanother friend, who had played along with Emmas demands.
Rosie, hi. Lucys voice trembled.
Rosie sat up. What happened? How was it?
It was a circus, Lucy sniffled. Absolutely awful! I left earlyIm in an Uber now. Dreadful
Tell me everything, Rosie commanded.
It started this morning. We turned up for make-up, and Emma threw a fit in the salon. Yesterday, Julie fell off her bicycleher arms in a cast. A plain, white cast.
When Emma saw her she started screaming across the street: How could you even think of cycling? You knew my wedding was coming up! Youve ruined the whole thing, that cast will ruin every photo!
Rosies eyes widened. What did Julie do?
She just stood there and cried. Emma rang the photographer and told him, Dont take any photos of the idiot in the cast. Or edit her out. Dont let her near me in group shots. Got it?
Julie hid in the loos most of the afternoon. But thats not the worst of it. The grooms great-gran arrivedeighty-five, tottering alongand wore her best dress, a grey lacy number. The look on Emmas face! She told her right there at the door, We said NO grey! Thats a mourning colour! Poor dear was flustered, said it was all she had. Emma told the photographer not to let her near the photo area either.
The mother-in-law nearly fainted. She stood up in front of everyone and shouted, Shes ninety! Came all this way for you, and youre berating her about a dress? They had a proper row. The groom looked like hed rather be anywhere else.
Rosie listened, struggling to square this Emma with the girl shed once shared chips with on a park bench.
It got worse, Lucy pressed on. Marina had a cold sorenothing major, just nerves. Emma went over and said, Couldnt you at least cover that up? Or stay home? Itll ruin my close-ups.
Then Claire got it for her nailseven after getting the teal manicure, one broke, so she repainted them red. Emma noticed during the toast. She nearly poured her drink on Claires head, screaming that shed deliberately done it to stand out and ruin the pictures.
Has she lost her mind? Rosie gasped.
Seems like it. Her face all night was thunderous. She fussed over our dresses, yanked our shoulders uprightstop slouching! always hissing.
The climax was dramatic. Know how she tossed her bouquet? She tried so hard for an airborne shot, she hurled it straight into the DJs deck. Knocked half his wires outthe music died. Emma whirled round on us, all the girls waiting, and screamed: Why didnt any of you catch it? You just stood there like statues, ruined my main moment, you bunch of wasters!
Wasters? Rosie echoed.
Her exact word. All you care about is shovelling food down, you cant even be bothered to help with a single decent photo. And there I was, ribs squashed by that dress, teal fingers gripping my glass, thinking: why did I come?
Eighty for make-up, one-twenty for the dress, a hundred stuffed in an envelope. Three hundred quid just to be called a waster and a statue.
Rosie hung up, set her phone down, and looked at herself in the mirror. She wore a simple, comfortable top.
Face clean, nails short and tidy, hair tied up.
By the hallway shelf, the envelope with her saved cash waited. Tomorrow shed pay off part of her laptop loan. Had she really lost anything?
Two days later, Emma posted a carousel of artful wedding photos on social media: bridesmaids in teal, Emma wreathed in dazzling white. Beautifullavish, even.
The caption read:
My perfect day. Thank you to everyone who shared my dream. Such a pity some friends were too petty to appreciate the scale of it. But life will sort things out. Let God judge; I forgive!
Rosie snorted. Forgiveness, indeed.
She navigated to Emmas profile, tapped the three dots, and clicked Block.
She didnt want to know what happened next to her ex-friend. Let her live her own movie.
***
A month later, Lucy came round for a cuppa. They sat in Rosies kitchen, steaming mugs in hand.
Heard the latest? Lucy lit up, unable to help herself. Our queens gone completely off the rails!
Rosie shrugged. I havent kept tabs. What now?
The wedding photographers suing Emma! She refuses to pay the rest of his fee. Says forty percent of the shots have the wrong shade of teal in the lighting. Can you believe it?
He did twelve hours, and shes going on about the wrong spectrum! Shes paid less than a thirdpocketed the rest.
Typical Emma, Rosie mused. And her husband? Simon?
Lucy burst out laughing. Simon filed for divorce last week. Didnt even make it to their honeymoonthey didnt get as far as Spain.
Second day in, she kicked off at his mumdemanded she repay the reception cost because granny had ruined her wedding video. Simon tried to calm her down. She called him a wimp and said he didn’t care about the familys reputation. He packed his bags and said he wouldnt live with such a self-obsessed toad.
Rosie gazed out the window.
You know, Lucy, she said, I was gutted at the time. Thought I was a rubbish mate for not finding those two hundred quid and fitting in. But now I hear all this, and Im glad I made the right call!
Lucy nodded. I flogged my dress for thirty quid. Bought myself an enormous cake and ate the lot. It was the best cake Ive ever had.
The pair burst out laughing, then agreed on a trip to the cinema to celebrate. No need for regretsthey were just fine. Their ex-friend could deal with her own drama now.






