Lily skipped ahead, her dress flaring like a burst of flame as she darted between legs and skirts. The air buzzed with scents—popcorn popping in salty bursts, caramel apples dripping with sticky sweetness, and the sharp sugar tang of cotton candy clinging to every breath. At the game stalls, Thomas took aim, tossing rings onto wobbling bottles until he won her a stuffed bear with a crooked grin stitched across its face. "He’s perfect!" Lily squealed, squeezing it tight against her chest. Emma knelt beside her at a shallow pool, guiding her hands to scoop a goldfish with a delicate paper net. "Look at you, so clever," Thomas cheered as Lily lifted her prize, the tiny fish shimmering like a jewel in the lantern light.
They roamed the festival grounds, pausing at a booth where an old man painted faces with deft strokes. Lily chose a butterfly, its wings unfurling across her cheek in swirls of blue and purple, the brush tickling her skin. "Now you’re ready to fly," Emma said, snapping a photo with her weathered Polaroid. The picture captured Lily mid-laugh, Thomas and Emma glowing behind her, a snapshot of bliss frozen in time. They devoured sticky cotton candy, its sweetness coating their fingers, and shared ears of roasted corn, the kernels popping with buttery warmth against their tongues.
As the sun sank below the horizon, the festival lights flickered on, casting a magical shimmer over the crowd. They climbed aboard the carousel, Lily astride a prancing horse painted in faded gold, its mane carved in wild curls. Thomas stood below, waving with each pass, his grin as bright as the lights. Emma bought her a star-shaped balloon, tying it to her wrist with a careful knot. "It’s like holding a piece of the sky," Lily mused, and Emma pulled her close, her eyes glistening with an emotion Lily couldn’t name.
The night crested with a Ferris wheel ride, the world shrinking beneath them as Lily nestled between her parents, her head resting on Emma’s shoulder, Thomas’s arm encircling them both. "I wish every day could feel this magical," she whispered, her voice soft against the creak of the wheel. Thomas squeezed her hand, his grip firm and sure. "It will, sweetheart," he vowed. Fireworks erupted overhead, blooms of red, blue, and gold splintering the sky, their booms reverberating in her chest. Lily watched, wide-eyed, her heart ballooning with joy.
Back home, she curled up with the bear tucked beneath her chin, the festival’s radiance lingering in her mind like a fading ember. Sleep wove its threads around her, but as dreams took root, a dull ache pulsed in her chest—faint at first, then insistent. The fireworks dimmed, their colors bleeding into shadow. She didn’t hear the distant crash of glass beyond her door, nor the low, strained voices cutting through the night. The dream held her fast, warm and secure, yet a chill slipped in, brushing her skin like a ghostly hand. She stirred, her brow furrowing, but sleep tugged her deeper, unwilling to let go.
In her dream, the festival spun on endlessly, a kaleidoscope of lights and laughter. She didn’t see the shadows inching closer, didn’t feel the weight of a truth she wasn’t ready to confront. The day replayed in vivid strokes—the taste of cotton candy melting on her tongue, the carousel’s jaunty tune, the steady clasp of her parents’ hands. It was perfect, untarnished, a refuge carved in her mind.
Yet as the night thickened, the ache sharpened, a nagging echo that something was wrong. She shifted, a small whimper slipping free, the dream flickering as colors dulled. She thought she heard a shout, a crash—muffled, far-off, like a storm beyond the horizon. She burrowed into her pillow, clinging to the illusion, desperate to stay in the glow of her parents’ love. The festival lights blurred, and the world held its breath.
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