I never loved him at first. I married him because I was tired—tired of being disappointed, tired of watching time strip the color from my dreams. He limped, he lived with his mother, he brewed tea instead of making grand promises. But on the night I became his wife, he whispered a vow unlike any I had ever hea… Continues…
I didn’t fall in love with James in a single moment; I fell for him in a thousand small, ordinary gestures that no one else ever bothered to offer. In every untouched night when he chose patience over entitlement, in every handwritten note beside a simple breakfast, he quietly rewrote what love meant to me. He never tried to dazzle me or outshine my past; he simply stayed, steady as a heartbeat, until I no longer feared being fragile in front of him.
Years later, when machines hummed around his hospital bed and the man who fixed everything could no longer fix his own failing heart, I finally understood the magnitude of what I’d been given. Our love had come late, without fireworks, but it had arrived in time to grow roots. When he left, smiling at the scent of cinnamon tea, he didn’t take my hope with him. He left it living inside me.





