“I flew back from London last week. I’d been stopping by random places hoping to catch you at one of them. I just passed my board exams – I’m an engineer now.”
Emotion rose in my chest.
“I’m a nurse now, too,” I told him. I knew he’d be proud of me. I’d talked about becoming a nurse since we were children.
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“I always knew you’d be one,” he said.
We sat together.
And for the first time in years, nothing was hidden.
We talked about everything.
The silence.
The pain.
The years we thought we had been abandoned.
“I couldn’t find a trace of you online,” Ethan started explaining. “I tried everything.”
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Ethan exhaled. “My dad had me enrolled under my full name overseas. Ethan wasn’t even what people called me anymore.”
I blinked. “What? No wonder I couldn’t find you anywhere.”
“And I didn’t have my own accounts for years,” he added. “By the time I did… I didn’t even know where to start looking.”
“This isn’t something we just accept,” Ethan said firmly. “They don’t get to erase our lives.”
He was right.
And for the first time, I felt it too.
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We confronted them together.
My mom tried to deny it at first.
“You’re imagining things.”
Ethan stayed calm. “We both sent letters. For years. None of them got through.”
She didn’t answer.
She didn’t need to.
His father was more direct.
“I did what was best for you.”
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“You took away my choice,” Ethan replied.
That was the truth.
And it stayed.
They didn’t lose us in one moment.
But they lost something that mattered.
Trust.
Forgiveness didn’t happen overnight.
It came slowly.
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In conversations.
In honesty.
In time.
“I thought I was protecting you,” my mom admitted one night.
“You didn’t trust me,” I said.
“I didn’t.”
“And now?”
She looked at me, her voice softer.
“I was wrong.”
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That mattered.
Ethan’s father didn’t say much.
But he didn’t deny it either.
And sometimes, that’s where change begins.
Months passed.
This time, nothing stood between us.
We rebuilt.
Not as teenagers holding onto a promise.
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But as adults choosing each other again.
One evening, Ethan stood in front of me with that same nervous smile.
“I’m still keeping my promise,” he said.
My heart raced.
“I told you I’d find you.”
He pulled out a small box.
“This time, we choose for ourselves.”
“Will you marry me?”
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Tears came instantly.
“Yes,” I whispered. “Yes.”
The wedding wasn’t perfect.
But it was real.
Both our parents were there.
Not in control.
Not deciding.
Just present.
My mom hugged me tightly.
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“I’m proud of you,” she said.
Ethan’s father nodded at him.
No speech.
Just respect.
Years later, our life looked exactly like something they once wanted for us.
But it meant something different now.
I worked as a nurse.
Ethan built his career as an engineer.
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We worked hard.
We built something stable.
Not for them.
For us.
One morning, I watched him in the kitchen, trying to hold a cup of coffee and our toddler at the same time.
“Careful,” I laughed.
“I’ve got it,” he insisted.
He didn’t.
Coffee almost spilled.
Our daughter laughed.
And so did I.
That night, as everything quieted, I thought about that promise again.
“I’ll find you.”
He did.
Not easily.
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Not quickly.
But completely.
I looked at him beside me.
No longer a memory.
No longer a question.
Just real.
Just mine.
And for the first time…
The story felt finished.
Because we didn’t build this life for approval.
We built it for each other.
And that made all the difference.