A Groom Found His Daughter Locked Away Before The Wedding Toast-congtien

The late afternoon sun was still warm on Carter Ellison’s shoulders when he realized his daughter was gone.

Not gone in the way children vanish for ten minutes behind a dessert table.

Not hiding behind a bridesmaid’s skirt, or chasing bubbles on the terrace, or sneaking frosting off the cake with one finger.

Image

Gone.

The ranch wedding had been planned down to the minute.

White flowers on the porch railings.

Gold chairs lined under the oak trees.

A string quartet tucked beside the stone steps.

A small American flag near the main entry fluttered lightly in the evening breeze, the kind of detail nobody noticed until everything else in the frame started to feel wrong.

Nearly three hundred guests stood on the lower terrace, laughing with champagne glasses in their hands while servers moved through them with trays of tiny crab cakes and paper cocktail napkins stamped with Carter and Sienna’s initials.

Everyone said the place looked perfect.

Carter kept looking for Lila.

She was eight years old, small for her age, with serious brown eyes and a habit of holding her breath when too many adults watched her at once.

That morning, she had stood in front of the bathroom mirror at home while Carter tried to tie the satin ribbon around her flower-girl dress.

He had tied it wrong twice.

She had sighed like a disappointed schoolteacher and said, “Daddy, I think you need a video for this.”

He had laughed because he needed to.

Some mornings still hit him that way.

One tiny remark, one ordinary sound, and suddenly he could remember his late wife standing in the same doorway, smiling at him like he was hopeless with anything involving ribbon.

Lila had lost her mother before kindergarten.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *