As night settled and guests began to leave, the house slowly returned to its familiar quiet. Dishes were stacked, chairs folded, leftover food wrapped and stored away. My sister, trying to lighten the mood, joked loudly, “Dad, try not to make any noise tonight, okay! The walls are thin!” My father laughed, a rare, unrestrained sound, and waved her off. “Oh, go mind your own business, you little rascal,” he replied, cheeks flushed. He took Larissa’s hand and led her toward the master bedroom—the same room he had shared with my mother for over thirty years.
We had gently suggested redecorating before the wedding, maybe repainting or replacing the old rug that curled slightly at the edges. He refused every time. “Leaving it as it is gives me peace,” he said. “It reminds me that love doesn’t erase the past. It grows alongside it.” Eventually, the lights went out, and my sister and I retreated to our childhood rooms, exhausted but content, convinced the night would pass quietly.