A man in a fire department dress uniform took the hand of a girl whose mother whispered that her father had died the year before. One of the teachers stepped in with a niece. A grandfather rose from the bleachers, slower than the rest, and asked his granddaughter if she’d like another turn. What had been an event defined by one category—father and daughter—became, under the pressure of real tenderness, something wider and truer: a room where no child stood alone if an adult had any decency left.

Melissa slipped away at some point. I didn’t see her leave. I doubt anyone cared enough to track it.

I could not stop watching Emma.

Her head tipped back when the general said something that made her laugh. He moved carefully, letting her guide the tiny awkward circles because children do not so much dance as announce joy with their feet. Every now and then she looked up at him with that searching expression grieving children wear when they are listening for echoes, and each time he answered with the kind of attention that says I know exactly whose daughter you are and I am going to treat that fact like an honor.