My Love Died in Spring
I waited ten years to get married to Emily Stanton.
We had applied for a marriage license seven times, and seven times it had been called off.
In our circle, we were the golden couple. She had sold her own blood to help cover my hospital bills, and I had stood by her side as she built the Stanton family empire from nothing.
On our tenth anniversary, I brought up the idea of finally having a wedding ceremony and making things official again.
She just rubbed her temples and tossed her blazer aside.
"We'll talk about it later. We've been together this long—why are you still hung up on something like this?"
The words I wanted to say got stuck in my throat.
Does every great love eventually fade into something ordinary?
The sound of running water came from the bathroom. Then her phone buzzed with a notification.
Against my better judgment, I picked it up. The contact name on the screen was impossible to miss:
Honey.
[Baby, when are you coming home? Jamie says she misses Mommy.]
A storm of emotions crashed over me.
That's when I discovered Emily Stanton had another WhatsApp account.
The woman in those posts was nothing like the one I knew.
At the top was a wedding photo—the two of them beaming, radiant. Tucked among the roses she'd received yesterday was a brand-new diamond ring, hidden between the petals.
The water in the bathroom stopped.
I clenched my fists.
Then I forwarded the guy's WhatsApp info to my assistant.
[Look into him.]