Iwas awake before my alarm, which is how it always goes when you have spent enough years in the army. Your body stops waiting for permission and simply starts, moving you forward before you have had a chance to decide whether you want to go. It was early, barely light, and my daughter was asleep on the couch with one of her stuffed animals hanging off the edge by its ear, and I stood there in the kitchen doorway for a moment watching her breathe before I turned back to the coffee maker and finished getting ready. There was a drive ahead of me. Three hours to Nashville, or just outside it. My sister’s wedding. I had taken leave for it, which had required more negotiation than it should have, because we were short on people and the timing was inconvenient and the army does not particularly care about the personal calendars of its soldiers, but I had made it work because it was Emily’s wedding and because making things work is, at this point in my life, more reflex than decision.
My uniform stayed in the closet. My mother had been specific about this in a phone call a few days earlier, her voice carrying the particular tone she used when she wanted something stated as preference rather than as the instruction it actually was. Just wear something normal, she had said. We don’t need the military thing at the wedding. I understood what she meant. It didn’t fit the aesthetic she had constructed in her head. The photographs she had been imagining for months did not include a daughter in uniform, so I pulled out a simple navy dress and hung it on the back of the door and told myself it was fine, because it was fine, because I have a long practice of telling myself that things which are not entirely fine are fine.
On the kitchen counter there was an envelope. I picked it up and felt the weight of it before setting it in my bag. Just under ten thousand dollars. I had been putting it aside for almost a year, the way you put money aside when you know you want to do something right and you understand that doing things right costs something. Extra shifts. Said no to things I should have said yes to. Skipped weekend plans I would not get back. The jewelry box was already in my bag, a silver necklace and matching earrings I had picked out months earlier, nothing extravagant, just right for her. I had pictured the moment enough times that it had become a kind of movie I played for myself on bad days. Emily coming over after the first dance, the hug, the box placed in her hands, the look on her face. The small, uncomplicated pleasure of having done something generous for someone you love.I checked on my daughter one more time, kissed her forehead without waking her, and left.
The venue was exactly what you would expect from the wedding my mother had spent a year planning. A restored historic hall outside Nashville, big windows, white flowers positioned with the deliberateness of something that has been arranged and rearranged until it was correct. Staff moving through the space with the practiced efficiency of people who have done this particular event a hundred times. I arrived before eight, found the coordinator, introduced myself, and asked what needed to be done. Within ten minutes I was tying ribbons around chairs and carrying boxes of centerpiece components from one end of the hall to the other. Nobody asked me to. Nobody told me to stop.