My Daughter Hit The Groom, Then Showed The Room Why She Had To-olive

The call came through my commanding officer while I was on base in Germany.

He did not soften it.

“Your daughter committed felony assault at her mother’s wedding,” he said.

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For a second I thought I had misheard him.

Ava was twelve.

She carried spiders outside in a cup.

She cried for a week when our old dog died.

She wrote thank-you notes without being told and taught her little brother Tommy how to fold paper cranes.

That child, my commander said, had beaten a grown man unconscious at the altar.

The grown man was Wade, my ex-wife Diane’s new husband.

I had never trusted his smile, but I had also never imagined this.

By the time my emergency leave was approved, I was moving through airports like a ghost.

Eighteen hours later, I was standing in front of Diane’s house with my duffel still on my shoulder.

The wedding flowers were still on the porch.

The gravel by the steps still held a rusty stain nobody had bothered to wash away.

Diane opened the door before I knocked twice.

Her face twisted when she saw me.

“We’re pressing charges,” she said.

“I’m not taking anyone’s side until I hear both,” I said.

She tried to block me.

I walked past her anyway.

The living room was a tribunal.

Diane’s parents sat on the couch.

Her brother Russ stood near the fireplace.

Her sister Fen hovered by the hallway, crying before anyone had said a word.

Wade’s parents stood behind the sofa, stiff and pale.

Wade himself sat in the center with a wired jaw, two black eyes, and bandages wrapped around his head.

He groaned softly every few seconds.

It took me longer than I like to admit to see my daughter.

Ava sat in a wooden chair beside the coffee table.

Her knuckles were split and swollen, one hand wrapped in a paper towel.

She looked exhausted.

She also looked unafraid.

“Your daughter is dangerous,” Diane said.

Wade’s mother leaned forward.

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