At my wedding, Grandpa handed me an old passbook. Dad smirked and dropped it into the ice bucket. “This passbook is junk.” I didn’t argue—I walked out. But I went to the bank anyway. The teller took one look and went pale, lowering her voice: “Ma’am… Please don’t leave.”
The reception was held under a cathedral-sized tent on the manicured lawns of the Mercer estate. The lighting was a meticulously engineered amber glow, designed to make the women look ethereal and the men look like titans. My father, Richard Mercer, stood at the center of this artificial universe, holding a microphone like a scepter. … Read more