Mom raised 5 of us alone. Two jobs, no sleep. When I turned 17, she vanished.
Police found nothing. Aunt said she’d run away from responsibility. Years later, on my wedding day, a text from an unknown number stopped me cold.
It read, “I never stopped loving you. Please forgive me.”
I was standing in front of the mirror, veil pinned, heart pounding for reasons that had nothing to do with nerves. My makeup artist was fussing over my lashes, but all I could see was that message glowing on my phone screen.
The number wasn’t saved. No name. Just those eight words that split my chest wide open.
I stared at the screen like it might explain itself. But it didn’t. Just sat there, pulsing, as if it knew exactly what it was doing.
My maid of honor, Tara, noticed me zoning out. “What’s up? Cold feet or food poisoning?”
I turned the screen to her.
She squinted, read it, then blinked like she wasn’t sure what she’d just seen. “Do you think it’s… her?” she asked softly. “I don’t know,” I said, which was both true and a lie.
Deep down, I knew. I felt it in my bones, the way you know a storm’s coming before the sky goes dark. Only one person could drop a line like that and leave my world spinning.
Tara didn’t push. She just placed a hand on my shoulder and said, “What do you want to do?”
The answer wasn’t simple. Part of me wanted to chuck my phone into the hotel toilet and pretend I never saw it.
Another part—the part that still dreamed of her, still hated her, still needed her—wanted to reply right now. But there was also the small matter of, you know, marrying Dean in two hours. Dean.
The man who stayed up till 2 a.m. helping me assemble IKEA bookshelves. Who learned to make my mom’s old meatloaf recipe just because I said I missed it once.
The man who told me I wasn’t broken, just weathered—and still worthy of love. He deserved my full heart, not the fractured mess this text just stirred up. Still, I typed back.
Who is this? I locked the phone and set it aside, trying to focus on the ceremony ahead. But every time someone handed me a mimosa or commented on how beautiful I looked, I felt like a fraud.
I didn’t want to start my marriage holding secrets, but how could I tell Dean this? My phone buzzed again twenty minutes later. I’m outside.
I just want to see you. I won’t stay. Please.
I nearly dropped it. Tara saw the color drain from my face and yanked the phone from my hands before I could chicken out. She read the text and her eyebrows lifted.
“Do you want me to handle this? I’ll get security. Or pepper spray.
Or a priest.”
“I need to see her,” I whispered. “Now?!”
“If I don’t… I’ll regret it for the rest of my life.”
Tara didn’t like it. Her face said terrible idea, but her loyalty said I’ll help you anyway.
She gave me five minutes. “And then I’m dragging your butt back inside and walking you down that aisle myself.”
I slipped out through the side entrance of the venue, careful not to ruin my dress. My heels clicked on the pavement like a warning drumbeat.
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