My father left when I was nine. Not for a job or a new life — but for Elaine, a woman he’d been secretly seeing.
After that, I learned not to expect much from him.
So when he offered to walk me down the aisle, I was surprised.
I let myself believe, just for a moment, that maybe he was finally ready to show up.
He wasn’t. He arrived with Elaine in a custom gown, made everything about her, and didn’t contribute a cent to the wedding —
despite offering to help. Still, I held on to hope, especially for one moment: our father-daughter dance.
It was supposed to be to Landslide, a song my mom used to sing to me when Dad left.
A symbol of what we’d been through. What we survived.
When the time came, the DJ called us to the floor. I looked for my dad. He didn’t move.
I approached him, confused. He wouldn’t meet my eyes.
“Elaine’s already been feeling excluded,” he said. “We’re gonna skip that.”
I stood frozen, humiliated, while the spotlight hit me and the music started.
He didn’t budge. He chose her. Again. In front of everyone.
Then, someone stepped forward — my husband. He took my hand and said,
“Let me have this dance.” And in that moment,
I realized I hadn’t lost anything. I had everything I needed.
What my father didn’t know? My husband’s great-uncle, sitting quietly nearby, was also his regional manager.
After watching everything unfold, he walked over and said calmly, “Don’t bother coming in on Monday.”
Elaine left him within the month. I haven’t spoken to my father since.
But I did send him a photo — me and my husband, dancing beneath the lights, smiling through the pain, stronger than ever.
And I’ve never had to ask anyone to choose me again.