3lor

At 61, I Remarried My First Love—Our Wedding Night’s Shocking Revelation

My name is Brian, and I am 61 years old. My first wife died eight years ago, after a protracted illness.

Advertisement

Since then, I have lived alone in silence. My kids are all married and settled. They stop over once a month to drop off money and drugs before hurriedly leaving.

I do not blame them. They live their own lives, which I understand. On rainy evenings, lying there listening to the drips hitting the tin roof, I feel terribly small and alone.

Advertisement

Last year, while reading through Facebook, I came upon Alice, my first love from high school. I adored her back then. She had long, flowing hair, deep dark eyes, and a bright smile that could light up the entire classroom. But, as I was preparing for my university entrance tests, her family arranged for her to marry a man in southern India who was ten years her senior.

We lost communication following that. We reconnected after forty years apart. She was a widow; her husband had died five years ago. She lived with her younger son, although he worked in another city and paid her only occasional visits.

Initially, we exchanged greetings. Then we began calling. Then came the coffee meetings. Without realizing it, I was riding my scooter to her house every few days, carrying a small basket of fruit, some candies, and a few joint pain tablets.

Advertisement

One day, half-joking, I said:

– “What if we two old souls get married?” Wouldn’t that relieve the loneliness?”

To my amazement, her eyes turned red. I stumbled, attempting to explain it was a joke, but she smiled softly and nodded.

At 61, I remarried — to my first love.

On our wedding day, I wore a dark maroon sherwani. She wore a simple cream silk saree. Her hair was neatly tied back, decorated with a tiny pearl pin. Friends and neighbors came to celebrate.

Everyone said, “You both look like young lovers again.”

I felt young. It was past 10 p.m. that night when I finished cleaning up the feast. I poured her a warm drink of milk and went about locking the front gate and turning out the porch lights.

Our wedding night, which I never believed would happen in my old age, had finally arrived.

I froze as I slowly removed her blouse.

Her back, shoulders, and arms were discolored and crisscrossed with old scars, like a terrible map. I stood motionless, my heart aching.

She quickly put a blanket over herself, her eyes wide with fright. I trembled and asked:

– “Meena…” “What happened to you?”

She turned away, her voice choked.

– “He used to have a bad temper.” He’d yell and strike me… “I never told anybody…”

I sat down alongside her, tears welling in my eyes. My heart ached for her. For decades, she had lived in quiet – in dread and shame — never telling anybody. I grabbed for her hand and softly placed it over my heart.

– “It’s fine now.” Nobody will hurt you again starting now. “No one has the right to make you suffer anymore…except me—but only because I love you too much.”

She burst into silent, trembling tears that echoed around the room.

I held her tight. Her spine was frail, and her bones protruded slightly – this petite woman had experienced a lifetime of silence and agony.

Our wedding night was not like those of younger couples. We lay beside each other, listening to the crickets chirping in the courtyard and the wind rustling through the trees. I stroked her hair and kissed her forehead. She stroked my cheek and whispered:

– Thank you. Thank you for showing me that there is still someone in this world who cares about me.”

I smiled. At the age of 61, I realized that money and youth’s unbridled emotions are not the source of happiness. It’s having a hand to hold, a shoulder to depend on, and someone who will sit by your side all night to feel your pulse.

Tomorrow will arrive. Who knows how many days I have remaining? But one thing is certain: for the rest of her life, I will make up for what she has lost. I’ll cherish her. I will safeguard her, so she will never have to worry about anything again.

Because this wedding night — after half a century of longing, squandered opportunities, and waiting — is the greatest present life has ever given to me.

Related Posts:

Tracy and the Courtroom That Exposed the Truth

The courtroom carried the scent of old wood polish, damp wool, and the particular odor of institutional routine. Advertisement I sat at the plaintiff’s table with my hands folded over a blank yellow legal pad. I listened to the steady ticking of the clock above the judge’s empty bench. Advertisement Outside, November rain struck the ... Read more

Meryl and the Letter That Led Her to Charlie’s Heart

I do not recall placing the blue camp shirt on the surface beside me. Advertisement One moment I sat on Owen’s bed with the fabric held to my face. I breathed in the remaining traces of sunscreen and a sweet quality I could never fully identify. Advertisement That particular scent of my child had become ... Read more

Emily and the Afternoon That Redefined Her Name

Five minutes after Judge Porter signed the decree, my father caught my wrist in the courthouse hallway outside Courtroom 6B. Advertisement My hands continued to tremble from the adrenaline of having completed something I had anticipated with dread for months. The hallway carried the scent of aged carpet and the formal atmosphere common to public ... Read more

Theresa and the Trip That Brought Mary Lou Home

My late husband left me at thirty-one with a four-year-old daughter and a house payment to manage. Advertisement I went to work and continued forward each day. Mary Lou grew up watching me maintain stability in our home. Advertisement That experience may have contributed to the determined quality she developed. She carried a particular set ... Read more

Margaret and the Christmas That Revealed Everything

Margaret had spent thirty-four years as the reliable daughter in her family. Advertisement She paid her own way through university without assistance. She called home every Sunday without fail. Advertisement She remembered every birthday and holiday with thoughtful gestures. She built a stable life through her work as an engineer. A paid-off car and savings ... Read more

Eleanor and the Morning That Changed Everything

Eleanor woke before dawn in her Lincoln Park home. Advertisement Excitement filled her thoughts and kept sleep away through the night. At sixty-seven and retired from her work as a cardiologist, she had spent six months arranging a special family journey. Advertisement Ten days in Maui waited ahead with oceanfront rooms, guided marine adventures for ... Read more