
The gymnasium of Oak Creek Elementary had been aggressively transformed into a sugary wonderland. Streamers in pastel pink and baby blue were strangled around basketball hoops, and the air was thick with a cloying mixture of cheap fruit punch, floor wax, and the desperate, high-pitched energy of three hundred children. It was the annual Father-Daughter Dance, a calendar event that had been circled in red ink in every household in the district.
Every household, except ours. For us, the date was a looming storm front, a black mark on the timeline of our survival.