At Birdsong Chapel in Goldsboro, NC, someone behind me tried to hum the hook from Gimme! Gimme! Gimme! and missed every note, which only made our row surge with nervous laughter. It was May 28, and Stacy was by the doors with a little nod that meant it was go time.
Gimme Gimme and the Walk-In
The wedding party burst through in pairs, each one with a different spin. One groomsman did a half-speed shimmy that looked like he regretted committing to it but finished anyway. A bridesmaid had a baby monitor tucked in her bouquet. When Graham and Ellie came in, hands up, the room clapped in this off-beat wave that felt human and right, like a stadium finding rhythm after a beat or two.
The first slow song hit and people got quiet. Wildflowers and Wine floated out, and Ellie leaned her forehead against Graham’s cheek for a second too long to be a pose. It was just them. During the blessing, her dad’s hand shook on the microphone, and he laughed at himself before it got to him. Dinner followed with soft covers that turned into the kind of humming you only notice when you stop talking.
When toasts rolled out, the best man pulled a crumpled note from his jacket that ripped a little at the corner. He kept reading. Half the room was already smiling before he got to the part about freshman year. The maid of honor’s joke about Ellie’s “aggressive list-making” earned clinks from the back where people were navigating rolls and butter knives.
Near the Cake Table
How Sweet It Is came on and the knife hesitated at the frosting edge. Ellie tried again, the whole room leaning in like it could help. Graham dabbed a dot of icing from her knuckle and swiped it to his own shirt cuff with a shrug. Someone yelled they’d pay money for the corner piece. A kid in suspenders stood too close, eyes level with the bottom tier, until his mom anchored his shoulder with two fingers.
Parent dances turned soft. Tupelo Honey turned Ellie and her dad into a slow circle, both of them mouthing the words like a secret they already knew. Then Forever Now wrapped up and everyone exhaled. Stacy waved the photographer over for the group picture, and we all shuffled onto the floor.
We squeezed tighter. The photographer counted down. The flower girl refused to smile until someone quacked from the back row. She cracked, right at “two,” and planted one tiny sneaker on top of Graham’s shoe like she owned it.
At eight, the lights dipped, and the first danceable beat landed. Chairs scraped. People let go of their forks. A knot of cousins sprinted in socks. The aunt who said she would only watch got pulled in by her sister and never found her way back to her seat.
“Hold my purse, I’m going in.”
Every time a new track started, people who had drifted to the patio came back with fresh determination. Water cups hit the edge of the bar. Everyone moved in loose circles that kept opening and closing. Sneakers squeaked. A boutonniere flew off and got tucked into a ponytail like it belonged there.
It’s Raining Men set up the bouquet toss, and Ellie did a fake pump that launched at least three gasps. The real throw clipped a mason jar on a side table, pinged once, and landed at the feet of a friend who had sworn she wouldn’t jump. She looked down at it like it was a small animal, then lifted it in the air to a chorus of woo’s she tried to shush.
One Last Song
We lined up for sparklers, someone using a cupcake wrapper as a wind shield to get theirs lit. The couple paused halfway through the tunnel while a late spark caught, and everyone cheered at the second glow like it was planned. After the last sparks faded, people trickled back inside for the after party, hair a little frizzier, shoes a little looser.
Wondering Why closed the night. Friends circled Graham and Ellie and swayed. Not many knew the words, but a few tried anyway. Ellie rested her head on his shoulder, eyes closed, while a cousin slid across the floor in socked feet, arms wide, trying to make the last note last one second longer.



