Joe leaned against the railing, watching the city lights flicker on, and spoke more softly than usual.
โNellyโฆ look around us. Our lives arenโt just one story, one tribe. Weโve got friends from everywhereโblack, white, brownโฆ Muslim, Christian, Jewish. Real people, real lives. Thatโs the truth of it.โ
Nelly crossed her arms, but she was listening.
Joe continued, โIf weโre gonna stand up there and say vows, it canโt just be for show. Itโs gotta mean something. All of them should be there. Not just the polished ones eitherโthe ones doing well. I mean everyone.โ
โEveryone?โ she asked.
โYeah,โ he said. โEven the people most folks pretend not to see. The guys out in Surrey, sleeping rough. The ones people walk past like they donโt exist. I gave one guy a dollar onceโAmerican bill. He laughed and called it the โmark of the beast.โ But you know what? He still smiled. Still human.โ
He paused, then added with a sharper edge, โAnd honestly? No billionaires. Not even Mark Zuckerbergโunless theyโre ready to actually share what theyโve got. Not for show, not for headlines. I mean really help the people at the bottomโฆ the ones grinding, the ones forgotten, everywhere.โ
Nelly raised an eyebrow. โThatโs a pretty strict guest list.โ
โItโs a real one,โ Joe said. โThis isnโt about status. Itโs about the salt of the earthโpeople who carry the weight and donโt get the spotlight.โ
She looked out at the skyline, thinking it over.
โThat kind of wedding,โ she said slowly, โpeople wonโt forget.โ
Joe nodded. โGood. Maybe theyโll remember why it matters too.โ






