We met at a small café near my apartment. Anna arrived ten minutes late, and I could feel my mother’s irritation building with every passing minute.
But Anna had no choice. Aaron’s babysitter had canceled, and she had brought him along.
When they walked in, Anna looked slightly overwhelmed—her hair loosely tied back, wearing jeans and a pale blouse, one collar edge curled. Aaron clung to her hand, quietly scanning the display case.
“This is Anna,” I said, standing. “And this is Aaron.”
My mother rose, shook Anna’s hand, and offered a smile that didn’t quite reach her eyes.
“You must be exhausted, Anna.”
“I am,” Anna said with a soft laugh. “It’s been one of those days.”
My mother asked Aaron exactly one question.
“What’s your favorite subject in school?”
When he answered, “art class,” she rolled her eyes—and then ignored him completely.
When the bill arrived, she paid only for herself.
Later, in the car, Anna looked at me calmly.
“She doesn’t like me, Jon.”
There was no anger in her voice—just honesty.
“She doesn’t know you, love.”
“Maybe,” she said. “But it’s clear that she doesn’t want to.”
Two years passed.
I met my mother again at the old piano showroom uptown—the place she used to take me as a child. She claimed the acoustics were “clean enough to hear your mistakes.” She called it her sanctuary for imagining “legacy.”
The room still smelled faintly of varnish and memory. The pianos stood in polished rows like prized possessions.
“So, Jonathan,” she said, running her fingers across a grand piano, “is this going somewhere, or are we just wasting time?”
“I asked Anna to marry me.”
Her hand froze mid-motion before dropping to her side.
“I see.”
“She said yes, of course.”
She smoothed her salmon blazer, avoiding my eyes.
“Well,” she said slowly, “then let me be very clear about something. If you marry her, don’t ever ask me for anything again. You’re choosing that life, Jonathan.”
I waited—for hesitation, emotion, anything.
But nothing came.
She simply let me go.
And I left.
Anna and I got married a few months later in a friend’s backyard.
There were string lights, folding chairs, and laughter—the kind that comes from people who live honestly.
We moved into a small rental house with sticky drawers and a lemon tree in the backyard. Aaron painted his room green and left handprints on the wall.
Three months later, at the grocery store, he looked up at me and said:
“Can we get the marshmallow kind, Dad?”
He didn’t even realize what he had said.
But I did.
That night, I cried quietly into a pile of laundry. For the first time, grief and joy existed together in the same space.
Life became simple.
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