I never imagined that the most defining moment of my wedding day would not be the exchange of vows, the music drifting through the courtyard, or even the first kiss as husband and wife. It would be the quiet, determined courage of a twelve-year-old boy who had spent four secretive months teaching himself how to crochet well enough to make a wedding dress. Lucas had always been observant, sensitive in ways the world often misunderstands, and endlessly patient when it came to the things he loved. Yarn and hooks had become his sanctuary the year before, a way to calm his thoughts and channel his creativity.
I knew he had been working on “something special,” but I assumed it was a scarf or maybe a small wrap. I never could have guessed the scale of his ambition. Late at night, after homework was finished and the house had gone quiet, he would sit cross-legged on his bedroom floor watching tutorial videos, unraveling mistakes, starting over, and carefully hiding skeins of ivory and pearl-colored yarn in the back of his closet whenever I walked by. He wanted it to be a surprise. He wanted, in his words, to make me something “no one else in the world could ever have.