At His Son’s Wedding, One Cruel Joke Turned Into A Legal Reckoning-kimochi

The ballroom smelled like roses, buttercream frosting, and the sharp spray the bridesmaids had used on their hair.

I remember that because grief saves strange details.

It lets you forget where you parked, but it remembers the exact smell of the room where your wife was humiliated in front of two hundred people.

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Elaine sat beside me in a pale blue dress she had almost returned twice.

The first time was after treatment left her too tired to stand in front of the mirror.

The second time was three days before the wedding, when she put on the wig and asked if it looked obvious.

I told her she looked like Elaine.

Not like before.

Not untouched by fear.

Like Elaine.

The woman who packed Caleb’s lunches, sat through his asthma attacks, and once drove thirty miles in a storm because he forgot his cleats before a tournament game.

She laughed when I said it, but her fingers kept pressing along the edge of the wig.

She had been brave all morning.

Bravery, I had learned, is not usually loud.

Sometimes it is swallowing nausea medication with hotel tap water because your son’s wedding still matters more than your own fear.

Caleb was our only child.

For years, that sentence felt like a blessing.

After that night, it felt like evidence.

He had been sweet once, or at least I believed he was.

He used to crawl into our bed during thunderstorms and press his cold feet against Elaine’s legs.

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