I drifted toward one of the marble pillars near the center of the ballroom and stopped where I could see without immediately being seen.
There he was.
Pastor Calvin Montgomery, glass in hand, surrounded by exactly the kind of men he loved best: men with titles, men with donors, men who controlled committees and boards and invitations. He looked regal in a black tuxedo, silver at the temples, shoulders square, smile practiced.
I had his eyes.
That used to bother me.
Not anymore.
A developer with a bourbon asked, “Calvin, you’re a blessed man. Family doing well?”
My father chuckled modestly, which was always his favorite kind of performance.
“The Lord has been kind.”
He turned slightly and gestured toward the head table where Dominique and Trent were already seated like they’d been born under better lighting than the rest of us.
“Dominique’s clinic is expanding,” he said. “And Trent has been doing remarkable work in finance. Remarkable. Sharp young mind. Disciplined. Visionary.”
Trent, a visionary.
I nearly laughed into my club soda.
A state senator nodded approvingly. “That the son-in-law managing your charity fund?”
“That’s the plan.”
“You trust him with that kind of money?”
“Completely.”