The invitation arrived like a ghost from a past I had meticulously buried. A ten-year college reunion. My stomach clenched.
No way. I almost tossed it, but a morbid curiosity, a masochistic whisper of “what if,” made me hesitate. What if I went?
What if I finally faced them? What if, after a decade, the sight of them didn’t gut me? It was foolish, I knew.
Some scars never truly fade. Some wounds just scab over, forever tender to the touch. And seeing him, seeing her… that was the deepest, most agonizing wound of all.
But I went. Dressed in what I hoped projected effortless confidence, I stepped into the brightly lit hall. The hum of unfamiliar chatter was a thin veil over my racing heart.
I scanned the room, every muscle tensed, bracing for the inevitable. And then I saw him. Across the room, framed by a cluster of laughing faces, older, yes, but still recognizable.
My breath hitched. He looked… tired. Worn.
Not the carefree, vibrant man I’d loved with every fiber of my being. Was that pity I felt? No, it couldn’t be.
Not after what he did. My eyes continued their search, dreading the next inevitable sighting. And there she was.
Sitting alone at a table near the back, nursing a drink. Her. The woman who, in one cruel night, had become the living embodiment of my greatest betrayal.
She didn’t look triumphant, didn’t have the smug aura I’d always imagined. She looked… small. Quiet.
The sight didn’t ignite the usual searing rage. Just a dull ache. I tried to blend in, to talk, to laugh, to pretend I wasn’t constantly aware of his presence, the way his voice occasionally carried over the din.
But then, he was walking towards me. My blood ran cold. This was it.
The confrontation I’d avoided for a decade. Every nerve ending screamed. He stopped a few feet away, his gaze direct, earnest.
“Hey,” he mumbled, his voice hoarse. “Can we talk for a minute?”
My throat was dry. “What is there to say?” I managed, my voice barely a whisper.
He took a deep breath. “Everything. I’m so sorry.
I know it’s a decade too late, but I just… I had to say it.” He looked down at his hands, then back up at me, his eyes brimming with something I couldn’t quite decipher. “I messed up. I was a coward.
I was confused, scared, battling my own demons I didn’t even understand back then. And I took it out on the one person who deserved none of it.” His voice cracked. “You deserved so much better than the pain I put you through.
I know I broke you. And I have lived with that regret every single day since.”
His words, raw and unvarnished, were a shock. Not the anger I expected, not the defensiveness I’d replayed in my head a thousand times.
Just profound sorrow. And for the first time, truly, I saw him not as the monster I’d painted, but as a flawed, broken human being. My god, he was hurting too.
A strange weight began to lift from my chest. A decade of carrying that anger, that bitterness, that profound sense of betrayal… it had been crushing me. And in this moment, hearing his genuine remorse, I felt a flicker of something new.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
Tap READ MORE to discover the rest 🔎👇