Wedding
There is a particular hour at the Ritz when the gulf turns the color of warm brass and the palm shadows go long across the lawn. Olivia and James held back from the reception just long enough to catch it — a few quiet frames between the ceremony and the first dance, with her veil moving in the breeze and the day finally feeling like theirs.
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Wedding
Caroline and Henry chose Oxford Exchange for the way it feels in the morning — the conservatory glass, the rows of books, the smell of espresso somewhere down a hallway. They read their vows in the bookstore aisle while close family stood in a half-circle around them, and afterward we walked through the old library before anyone else arrived.
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Wedding
Three days on Boca Grande — oyster lunches, a welcome dinner under the banyans, and a sailcloth tent set just close enough to the water that you could hear it during the toasts. Margaret took her shoes off before the ceremony and never put them back on. Will, to his credit, did the same by the second dance.
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Wedding
Eleanor arrived at the Powel Crosley chapel in a cream Silver Cloud her grandfather had kept in the family for forty years. The whole car — the chrome, the cracked leather, the hand-stitched headliner — felt like a small heirloom showing up to a wedding. The ceremony itself was brief. The reception, somehow, was even more so. They wanted everyone home by ten.
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Wedding
Sophie's bridesmaids wore chocolate silk and brought their own coffee. The veil came out of its box in the second-floor light and the room went quiet, the way these rooms always do. By the time Andrew saw her in the courtyard there was nothing left to say — just a long look, a hand at her waist, and the slow walk back inside for the first toast of the day.
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