Bride Found Her Daughter’s Empty Chair Seconds Before Saying “I Do”-heuh

I was standing at the altar, only seconds away from saying, “I do,” when I realised my daughter’s chair was empty.

Emily is seven years old.

At first, my mind tried to make sense of it in the most ordinary way.

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Maybe she had dropped something.

Maybe she had gone to the toilet with one of the bridesmaids.

Maybe she was hiding behind the flowers, playing some little game because weddings are long and children do not understand why grown-ups make them sit still in scratchy dresses.

But then I saw the chair properly.

The little white bow was still fastened round the back.

The name card was still tucked beside the folded programme.

Her place was untouched.

Emily was gone.

The room was glowing with soft afternoon light, the sort people spend too much money arranging for photographs.

White flowers framed the aisle.

Candles trembled in glass holders.

A violin played somewhere to my left, sweet and steady, as if my whole body had not just gone cold.

Two hundred guests were watching me.

They were smiling in that bright, expectant way people smile when they know the next sentence is supposed to be beautiful.

The judge kept speaking.

Ethan stood beside me with his hand close to mine.

His mother, Mrs Margaret, sat in the front row in burgundy silk, composed and straight-backed, her face arranged into pride.

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