His back was straight, his shoulders tense, and his hands were clenched so tightly at his sides that his knuckles were white.
“Dan?” I said lightly. “What are you doing?”
No answer.
I laughed, trying to brush away the sudden prickle of unease. “Are you nervous? Because if this is about wedding-night jitters, I promise I—”
He didn’t turn around.
That’s when the air shifted.
“Dan,” I said again, my voice sharper now. “You’re scaring me.”
Slowly, he turned to face me.
I have seen guilt before. I lived with it after Peter died. I carried it in quiet moments, in unanswered questions, in the impossible habit of wondering what I could have done differently.
But what I saw on Daniel’s face was something deeper.
It was guilt layered with fear. Fear layered with shame.
“I need to show you something,” he said, barely above a whisper. “Something you need to read. Before we… before our first night as husband and wife.”
My stomach dropped.
“What are you talking about?” I asked.
He looked at the floor, then back at me. “I should’ve told you earlier. I wanted to. I just… I was afraid.”
Afraid of what?
He turned back to the safe and entered the code. The click of the lock echoed loudly in the quiet room.
“I’m sorry,” he said as the door swung open. “I’m so sorry.”
He reached inside and pulled out a plain white envelope. It was creased and worn, the edges softened as if it had been handled too many times.
From inside the envelope, he took out an old phone.
It was cracked. Scuffed. The kind of phone you forget about once you upgrade, then find years later at the bottom of a drawer.
“What is that?” I asked, my voice unsteady.
“My old phone,” he said. “My daughter found it a few weeks ago. I hadn’t seen it in years. I charged it… and I found something.”
He turned it on, his thumb trembling as the screen lit up. He opened a messaging app and scrolled for a moment, then handed it to me.
“It’s a conversation between me and Peter,” he said. “From seven years ago.”
My heart began to race.
I stared at the screen, the familiar interface suddenly feeling foreign and heavy. I scrolled upward, reading messages exchanged long before my life fractured.
At first, it was harmless.
Jokes about work. Complaints about traffic. Plans to grab beers. Two men who had known each other forever, comfortable and casual.
Then the tone shifted.
Daniel had clearly been venting—about his divorce, about feeling like his life was falling apart.
And then I saw the message that made my breath catch.
Dan: I don’t know, man. Sometimes I look at what you have, and I wonder if I’ll ever get that lucky. You and Isabel just work, you know?
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