Thirty-Seven Empty Chairs, A Wedding Cake, And One Call-heuh

I knew the number because I had counted them twice.

Thirty-seven chairs.

Not a loose guess made later, not a bride sharpening the hurt for sympathy, not a number that grew every time the story was told.

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Thirty-seven white folding chairs sat in careful rows inside the little marina function room, facing the grey water as if they had turned up for me when my family had not.

I had put them there the night before with my own hands.

I had lifted each chair from the stack, dragged it into place, pulled the white cover over the back, and smoothed the creases until my fingers ached.

I had tied the cheap ribbon bows myself because paying anyone else to do it would have meant cutting something else from the budget.

The flowers came from a supermarket.

I trimmed them in my kitchen sink while the kettle clicked on and off beside me, the stems leaving green marks on the draining board.

The lanterns were plastic, the tablecloths were hired, and the room smelt faintly of polish, damp coats, and the sea.

Still, when I stood back and looked at it, I thought it was beautiful.

Not grand.

Not glossy.

Not the sort of wedding my mother would take photographs of from every angle and post with little hearts underneath.

Beautiful in the way honest things can be beautiful when no one is pretending they cost more than they did.

Trevor had stood in the doorway, hands in his pockets, watching me fuss over the chairs.

“You know,” he said, “people are coming to see you get married, not inspect the bow work.”

I told him that was easy for him to say because he had not spent twenty minutes making one bow sit straight.

He smiled and crossed the room to help.

His fingers were broad and scarred from years of fixing engines, ropes, pumps, and all the stubborn bits of metal people brought him when they had ignored warning signs for too long.

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