The evening sun was still warm when we arrived at Melissa’s Fourth of July barbecue. After years of hospital visits and heartbreak, Lily—now fifteen—stood tall in a blue dress, her scar exposed. “I’m tired of hiding,” she’d said. I’d never felt prouder.
At first, the day was lovely—until Melissa’s mother leaned in and asked Lily, in syrupy tones, if people stared, if the scar would be visible in wedding photos. I waited for Melissa to say something, but she just sipped her wine.
I whispered to Lily, “You wanna leave?”
“Yeah,” she said. “But first I want to say something.”
She stood. Calm. Cold. “If we’re editing out things that make people uncomfortable, can we Photoshop your extra 20 pounds? They ruin the aesthetic for me.”
Silence. Fire.
We left—past Melissa’s protests and her later call blaming Lily. I just told her, “If you can’t stand up for my daughter, there’s no future here.”
That night, I saw Lily asleep, moonlight on her scar. She wasn’t hiding anymore.
And neither was I.