The moment the church doors slammed open, my heart stopped.
My father—who hadn’t spoken to me in years—stood at the entrance, chest heaving, eyes wild.
And then, in a voice that sent a ripple of shock through the crowd, he bellowed, “I OBJECT!”
Growing up, my dad was my hero. The kind of dad who made Saturday morning pancakes shaped like dinosaurs, stayed up late helping with school projects, and cheered so loud at my soccer games that the refs had to ask him to tone it down. He was my rock.
But all that changed when I told him I was in love with a woman.
I met Samantha in college, and she turned my world upside down in the best way.
She was brilliant, kind, and had this laugh that made everything feel lighter.
We started as friends, but soon enough, she was the person I wanted to spend my life with. I thought my dad—my best friend—would be happy for me. Instead, he looked at me like I was someone he didn’t recognize.
“She’s a girl, Emily,” he said, his voice heavy.
“What kind of life do you think this is going to be?”
That conversation shattered something between us. He wasn’t furious, wasn’t screaming—just… disappointed. We fought a lot until one day, he simply stopped arguing.
Stopped calling. Stopped showing up.
After that day, it was like he faded out of my life. I told myself I didn’t care—that if he couldn’t accept me, then I didn’t need him.
But some nights, when the world was quiet and Samantha was asleep beside me, I let myself grieve him.
The father I had lost. The father who had chosen disapproval over love.
For years, I held on to the hope that he’d come around. That he’d wake up one day and realize I was still his daughter, still the same Emily who used to sit on his shoulders to hang the Christmas star.
When my mom passed away, I thought… maybe.
Maybe grief would shake him awake, make him realize life was too short for grudges. But at the funeral, he barely looked at me. His handshake was stiff, his words cold.
And I knew. I knew he blamed me.
“She was heartbroken,” my aunt whispered when she thought I couldn’t hear. “It was too much for her.”
It was like a knife to the gut.
Did my father believe that, too? That I had caused her pain?
After that, I stopped hoping.
But when Samantha proposed under a sky full of stars, I still sent him an invitation. It was more out of habit than anything else—a final chance for him to prove me wrong.
To show up. To be my dad again.
Weeks passed. No response.
I told myself it didn’t matter. That I was done being disappointed.
The wedding day arrived, and it was perfect. A beautiful garden venue, string lights twinkling above us, wildflowers everywhere.
My best friend walked me down the aisle. Samantha’s brother walked her. It wasn’t traditional, but it was ours.
As I stood there, looking into Samantha’s eyes, I thought, This is it.
This is happiness. Nothing can ruin this moment.
And then I heard it.
“I OBJECT!”
A collective gasp rippled through the guests. My heart stopped.
I turned, my breath catching in my throat.
There he was. My father. Standing at the back of the aisle, gripping a small wooden box so tightly his knuckles turned white.
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