“Now I know.”
Jerome, Adele’s fiancé, stepped into the kitchen with seating cards in his hand and froze when he saw our faces.
“Bad time?”
Adele looked at him. “My mother texted Dad.”
Jerome put the cards down. “She’s coming?”
“With Harry,” Adele said. “And I need the box.”
I looked at him. “Don’t get dragged into this.”
“I’m marrying into this family in three days,” he said. “I think the dragging already happened.”
Adele touched my arm. “Please, Dad. Let me handle it.”
“You don’t know what that box will do.”
“I know what her lie is already doing.”
I looked at my daughter. I still saw the little girl on the stairs, but she was no longer little.
“What are you going to do with it?”
“Use it only if she lies.”
“Then it stays closed.”
That felt fair.
The box was where it had always been, tucked behind old papers and a blanket no one used. I pulled it down with both hands and carried it back.
“There,” I said, setting it on the table. “Fifteen years.”
—
On the wedding day, I woke before sunrise.
I was in a small room, wrestling with my tie, when Jerome came in.
“Need help?”
“I raised six girls,” I said. “You’d think I could handle fabric by now.”
He fixed the knot. “You handled the hard part. Today is about Adele. But I know what it took to get her here.”
I had to blink.
“I will.”
The door opened, and Lucille walked in like she was walking into battle.
“If Maya makes a scene,” she said, “I’m walking outside before I say something I can’t take back.”
Behind her, Shannon appeared in a soft blue dress, twisting her bracelet around her wrist.
“Dad?”
“Do I have to hug her?”
The room fell quiet.
I placed both hands on her shoulders. “No. Nobody gets a hug just because they share blood.”
Her shoulders relaxed. “Okay.”
Piper kept asking if everyone had eaten, which meant she had not eaten.
Then the doors opened.
I knew Maya had arrived before I saw her.
The room changed.
Voices dropped.
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