At The Vines a flower girl scuffed her shoe against the slate and whispered, “Do we go now?” It was November 29, the light soft the way late fall gets in Lexington, SC. Chairs faced a simple arch, and the breeze kept turning the corner of the program in my hand.
Wyatt stood with both hands pressed flat at his sides until the music started. Classic love songs, the kind everyone knows without saying the titles. When the bride reached him, he let out a quick breath he’d been holding and didn’t try to hide it. Someone’s grandma dabbed at her eyes with a napkin she’d folded into a perfect square.
During vows the mic squeaked once and everyone smiled like they were all in on the same small joke. The kiss landed easy. I heard a chair leg scrape and a cousin whisper “finally” behind me, then the scatter of people heading for the patio like a tide pulling back.
The Booth Line Started Early
Cocktail hour was barely ten minutes in and the photo booth line was already curling around the barrel table. An uncle held a glittery cowboy hat like it might escape and a kid kept dropping the foam mustache, picking it up, trying again. Two bridesmaids practiced the same pose three times, then laughed so hard one had to lean on the wall.
“Hold up, do the hat one again.”
When the introductions started, the room bunched in close. Wyatt and his bride came through the doors with that stiff little half-run couples do when they want to get to the middle fast. Their first dance to Bless the Broken Road felt small in the best way. He traced the edge of her hand with his thumb like it was a habit, not a pose.
The parent dances turned the room softer. On I Loved Her First her dad stepped on the hem for half a second. She stopped, laughed, and lifted the skirt with two fingers so they could keep moving. He mouthed “sorry” without sound. People around the dance floor swayed, holding their drinks low.
Wyatt danced with Holland to My Boy. Holland stared at his own shoes at first, then leaned in closer by the chorus. Someone near the back sniffled and tried to pretend it was allergies.
Sneakers Sliding Across Concrete
Speeches wrapped and there was that brief lull where plates clinked and chairs shuffled. Then the first beat hit and half the room stood up at once like muscle memory. Aunts in bright sneakers slid across the concrete, napkins stuffed into clutches, while the toddlers made a beeline for the lights that splashed color near the wall.
Cake cutting came with Marry You and a swipe of frosting on the nose that missed and landed on a cheekbone instead. They posed anyway. No one cared if it wasn’t centered. I saw Angel tilt her camera and laugh with them.
For the bouquet toss, everyone backed up a full two steps. The throw clipped a string of bulbs and a few petals spun out like confetti. It dropped straight into the arms of a bridesmaid who was mid-sip, phone still in hand, eyes wide. She didn’t even try to pretend she’d planned it. Wyatt bent to pick up a lone petal that had stuck to his tie and flicked it off, grinning.
The garter sailed like a rubber band and three guys misjudged it, all hands and no catch. One of them knocked another’s drink, caught it before it fell, and the whole corner cheered like he’d won a game.
The Anniversary Dance to Remember When filled the floor with couples moving slow. The longest married pair stayed till the end, her heels already off and tucked by the DJ table, socks a soft lavender. She rested her chin on his shoulder and closed her eyes for half a verse.
Near The Patio Doors
As the night thinned, people drifted to the patio, then got pulled back in when a favorite song started. You could see it happen from across the room. A chorus would float out, someone would point, and they’d jog back, laughing, hands up like they were late to something important.
By 7:40 the room was mostly empty, the last glasses cleared. Guests lined up for the exit outside, holding sparklers at their sides, not yet lit. Inside, the two of them had their private dance to Marry Me. Through the glass, I caught a glimpse of her slipping her shoes off and nudging them under the head table with her toe, then setting her chin on his chest as if the room had been theirs all day.
Someone outside started the countdown too early. The sound bled in, muffled. Wyatt laughed, leaned his forehead to hers, and they stayed where they were until the doors opened and the cool air rushed in.



