I was closer now. Close enough to see Emma’s lip begin to tremble. Close enough to see Melissa glance briefly over her shoulder, aware of the audience and using it like stage light.

“It’s just that we worked very hard to make tonight special,” Melissa continued. “And when someone stands alone like this, it changes the mood. You understand, right? It makes people… sad.”

My vision narrowed.

“But maybe he can still come,” Emma whispered. “Maybe just a little.”

Melissa’s expression pinched with impatience. “Sweetheart, sometimes clinging to things that aren’t possible only makes everyone uncomfortable. There’s no need to stay somewhere you don’t belong.”

That was the exact moment something inside me snapped.

Not cracked. Not bent. Snapped.

I pushed past a man holding a juice box, barely noticing when orange liquid splashed across my wrist. I heard myself say, “Melissa,” but it came out lower and harsher than I intended, more warning than word. Another step and I would have been beside them. Another step and I might have said something I’d been saving for women like her my entire life. Another step and perhaps all the careful, widow-appropriate composure people had admired in me for six months would have finally caught fire in a middle school gym.

Then the doors slammed open.

Not gently. Not accidentally. They hit the wall with a force that cracked through the music, and the DJ cut the track off mid-chorus in a panicked fumble that made the whole gym go still.

The sound that followed wasn’t loud exactly. It was measured. Heavy. Synchronized.

Footsteps.

Anyone can walk. This was different. Every step landed with the unmistakable rhythm of people moving in formation, even indoors, even on waxed school flooring. Heads turned. Conversations died. Somewhere a plastic cup dropped and rolled under a table.