At Sky Retreat, someone behind me whispered, “Is that the Pirates theme?” and a few heads tilted toward the aisle like we were in on a small joke. October 26 had that crisp edge that wakes you up. Old crooner tunes floated over the chairs while people tucked scarves a little tighter. Michael stood with his hands clasped too hard, then loosened them like he remembered to breathe. When Cady turned the corner, a hush rolled through the rows so fast it felt like wind.
After vows and a loud burst of applause, everyone spilled onto the patio, pointing toward the hills like they might move closer if we stared long enough. Purlear, NC looked soft as the sun slid down. A cousin tried to balance a second plate of sliders and almost lost one to the railing. Someone asked for decaf and laughed when they realized they were the first one to think about it. The line at the bar loosened as people found their people. Jackets came off. The sound of glasses tapping tabletops started to fill the spaces between conversations.
By dinner, the buffet line curled past the windows. Plates bumped. A roll leapt off a plate, was caught midair, and put back with a guilty look nobody minded. When the wedding party came in, two bridesmaids formed a tunnel with their arms and dragged everyone through it, napkins waving. During toasts, Tyler unfolded a piece of paper that had clearly lived in a pocket too long. The mic let out one tiny squeal that made everyone flinch and grin. He told a story about a camping trip where Michael insisted instant coffee was “a personality,” and Cady laughed into her napkin like she’d heard it a hundred times and still liked it.
First dances started and the room pulled in tight. Their song, Hopelessly Hoping, stretched out the moment so it felt private even with all of us watching. Michael spun Cady, slow, cautious. Her left earring slipped and snagged on a bit of lace at her shoulder. He paused, lifted his hand, and eased it free with the gentlest touch. The room breathed out with him. Someone clapped once, softly. Then they went back to swaying like that hiccup belonged.
Parent dances came next, with Brown Eyed Girl catching half the room mouthing along without thinking. During My Wish, Cady’s mom wiped at her eyes and then gave up and let the tears run. You’ll Always Be My Baby made a couple of dads wander back to the edge of the floor, fingers tapping against their pockets, like they wanted in but weren’t sure.
Once the lights went a little lower, the floor filled. It thinned again when dessert appeared. Then the first line of a throwback hit came on and you could hear chairs scraping back. People hustled out, napkins still in hand, hands in the air by the first chorus. At cake cutting, You Make My Dreams Come True kicked in and Michael ended up with frosting on his tie. Cady leaned across the table and dabbed him with the corner of a cocktail napkin, missed, and smudged it worse. She shrugged. He wore it like a badge.
The bouquet toss at 9:30 got messy in the best way. The circle of guests shifted, elbows tucked in, knees bent like a soccer drill. Cady launched the bouquet a little high. It popped off one of the ceiling beams and ricocheted sideways. An aunt who had been pretending not to participate ended up catching it with her forearm while holding a cider. One rose petal stuck to her lip gloss. She froze, looked at her drink, then at the flower in her hand, and the room just erupted.
Later, during the Anniversary Dance, couples shuffled forward in waves as years were called out. The last pair held each other like they had done it a thousand times. He rested his cheek against her hair. Everyone else swayed at the edges, a little quieter, then snapped back awake when the next song hit.
Shoes found a corner and formed a small, polite pile. The lights made low patterns across the ceiling. Near the end, Cady and Michael leaned against each other by the edge of the floor, breathless, hair a little damp, grinning at nothing in particular. A napkin clung to the bottom of her heel as she stepped back into the crowd and didn’t even notice.



