My name is Megan Lawson, and my daughter is Katie, and six months before that night my husband Captain Mark Lawson died on the other side of the world in a place whose name still tastes like metal whenever I try to say it out loud. Since then every ordinary thing has split into before and after, because before I believed in endless tomorrows and after I learned time can drag and lurch in ways that make simple mornings feel impossible and impossible moments feel strangely manageable.
I had not wanted to bring Katie to the father daughter dance, and that is the first truth I must admit even now. The second truth is that she wanted to go with a quiet stubborn hope that made saying no feel like its own cruelty.
The flyer came home folded in her backpack, bright pink with silver stars and the words Enchanted Evening at Riverbend Elementary written in curling letters. I found it at the kitchen table and looked at her in the living room, and she went still before I even spoke and said, “That’s the dance,” in a voice that already understood too much.
I asked, “Do you think you want to go,” and she nodded without looking up. Then she asked, “Do I still get to go,” and that question felt heavier than anything I had carried in months.
I sat beside her and watched her press her crayon hard into the page, and I said, “Do you want to go,” trying to sound steady. She nodded again and said softly, “Maybe Daddy can come, just for a little while,” and I felt something inside me twist because children ask impossible things like they are asking for a glass of water.
A week later at breakfast she circled her spoon through milk and asked, “Do you think Heaven lets people visit if it is important,” and I stood at the sink gripping a mug too tightly. I said, “I think your dad loves you enough to never really leave you,” and I knew that was the kind of answer people give when truth feels too sharp to hold.
We bought her dress after three stores and a near meltdown, and when she stepped out in lavender tulle and turned slowly I had to look down because my eyes filled too fast. She asked, “Does it look like a real princess dress,” and I said yes, and then she whispered, “Even without a dad holding my hand,” and I answered, “Especially then,” even though my voice nearly broke.
That night I sat with the dress and stared at Mark’s untouched side of the closet, and I thought I could not do this alone and also could not take this away from her. Mark would have known what to do, and that was the cruelest part of losing him because the problems that came after his death were exactly the ones he would have solved best.
The night of the dance I curled her hair and pinned a silver star clip, and she asked, “Do I look old enough for him to recognize me,” and I said, “Your father would recognize you anywhere,” and this time I managed not to break.
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