A Fatherless Girl Was Told To Leave. Then Uniformed Men Entered-yumihong

The elementary school gym had been decorated like grief could be kept outside if everyone taped up enough gold paper.

Garlands hung beneath the basketball hoops.

Star-shaped balloons bumped softly against the low ceiling whenever the air conditioner kicked on.

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A folding table near the entrance held cupcakes, napkins, punch cups, and a clipboard where parents were supposed to sign in before joining the Daddy-Daughter Dance.

The floor smelled of wax and old sneakers.

The music was too cheerful.

Sarah noticed that first because cheerful music is cruel when your child is standing still in the middle of it.

Emily was seven years old, wearing a lavender dress they had bought three days earlier at a discount shop next to the grocery store.

It had taken her almost forty minutes to choose it.

One dress had scratched her arms.

One had too many sequins.

One had made her whisper that she looked silly.

Then she had stepped out in lavender tulle, holding the sides like she had seen older girls do in movies, and asked, ‘Does it look like a real dance dress?’

Sarah had said yes before she could cry.

Emily had turned once in front of the mirror.

‘Even if nobody holds my hand?’

Sarah had gone down on one knee and fixed a strap that did not need fixing.

‘Especially then,’ she said.

That sentence had felt brave in the store.

In the gym, it felt like a promise Sarah was not sure she could keep.

Six months before that night, Captain Michael had died overseas during deployment.

Sarah still did not know how to say that sentence without feeling it in her teeth.

People told her she was strong.

People told her Emily was resilient.

People brought casseroles for two weeks and then quietly returned to their own lives.

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