

"One thing I know that he would want her to do is live," she says. Knowing her daughter is doing what Wendell wanted helps Sheila keep going. This bittersweet blend of joy and heartache is all too common at the world's busiest airport, where moments of love and loss are carried like precious cargo and unwieldy baggage. He won't see Britney wear the wedding dress she picked out after shopping at stores in three states. He won't dance with her at the reception. She knows Wendell won't walk their daughter down the aisle.

Sheila's trying to hold it together, but she's been tearing up all week. Wendell, her husband of 27 years, died of a heart attack in March. More than 200 people are coming to the wedding, but Sheila can't stop thinking about the one person who won't be there. And their flight from Columbus, Ohio, just arrived. This weekend, Britney is marrying her fiancé, Philip. Her cell phone is chirping with calls and texts.
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Today, Sheila's home is full of invitations, goody bags and gifts. … And I remember as she started to grow and started to date and everything, I just kept praying." "When the doctor said it was a girl," she says, "I immediately started praying for her mate. Sheila is only days away from a moment she's dreamed of for decades. Her daughter Britney just texted four words that sent her scrambling: "On the Plane Train." Sheila Payton barrels down I-85 in her silver Chevrolet Sonic.
