I parked outside the old brick building, my heart pounding harder with every step. The address led me back to our high school, now a glittering restaurant. For a moment, I thought it was a cruel joke. Then the doors opened, confetti rained down, and time seemed to fold. There was Walter, waiting beneath soft lights, surrounded by faces I hadn’t seen in decades.
He took my trembling hands and reminded me of a long-ago promise broken by circumstance, not choice: the prom night we never shared. With my daughter, our friends, and an event planner, he had rebuilt that lost evening from memory. The mysterious woman was his granddaughter, enlisted to keep the surprise intact. As we swayed to an old love song, my fears melted into quiet gratitude. At seventy-one, in a second wedding dress, I finally understood: love doesn’t just return—it rewrites the ending.