After lunch, she pulled out a photo album. Burgundy cover, slightly bent at the corners. Page after page of the Park family — James at five in a tiny tuxedo, Mrs. Park at his college graduation holding a bouquet almost bigger than she was. A lifetime of recorded moments.

Then she turned to a page near the back.

There I was.

A Fourth of July barbecue. I was standing by the grill, holding corn on the cob, laughing at something with my head tilted back. I hadn’t known anyone was taking a picture. I didn’t know I was being recorded.

But there I was, in someone’s family album, between James’s cousin’s graduation photo and his brother’s engagement dinner.

I had been in a family this whole time. I just hadn’t recognized it because it didn’t look like the one I’d been trying to get back into.

Mrs. Park closed the album.

You belong in this book, Harper. You have for a long time.

She left at three. Hugged me at the door — short, firm, the kind that says enough now, you’ll be fine — and told me to return the pot next Thursday.

Not a suggestion. A schedule.

That night I stood on the balcony. Los Angeles spread below in ten million lit directions.

James came up behind me. We were quiet in the way we’re quiet when neither of us needs to fill the space.

I keep checking my phone, I said.

For what?

I was waiting for the call from Bartlesville. The voicemail from my father. The text from my mother that said we changed our minds.

I was still waiting for four tickets to Disney World, standing on a balcony in Los Angeles, twenty-seven years later.

I set the phone face-down on the railing.

I’m done building bridges to people who aren’t standing on the other side.

James looked at me.

We’re getting married. I don’t care if nobody from Bartlesville comes. I’m done waiting for them to choose me. I choose us.

He put his arm around me and we stood there, looking at the city that had held me when my family wouldn’t.

For the first time in weeks, I was standing on something that didn’t shake.

The venue came about because of a man named Warren Aldridge, sixty-eight, retired, who owned a property on a cliff in Malibu worth approximately forty million dollars. I knew this because Mercer and Associates had done the seismic retrofit on that property in 2021 and I was the lead engineer. The house sat cantilevered over the Pacific in a way that looked reckless but was, if you checked the math, exactly right.