A Single Dad Was Rejected on a Christmas Blind Date — Then a Stranger Asked, “Be My Husband” – Part 16

“I don’t think that’s a good idea,” Ethan said carefully. “Please, just for a minute. I won’t make a scene.” Amanda glanced at Mara. I owe you both an apology. Mara looked at Ethan, leaving the decision to him. Sophie tugged on her hand, clearly unhappy with this development. “Okay,” Ethan said finally. “One minute.

” He followed Amanda to a quieter corner of the hallway while Mara stayed with Sophie, already redirecting the child’s attention to photos on her phone of the performance. Amanda’s sister collected her niece and drifted away, giving them privacy. “I was horrible to you,” Amanda said without preamble. “At the art exhibition, I said things that were cruel and unfair, and I’ve been avoiding you ever since because I didn’t know how to take them back.” “Okay.

” Sarah was my best friend. When she died, I felt like I lost part of myself. And watching you move on, watching you build something new with someone else. It felt like you were erasing her. Like everything she was, everything we shared, none of it mattered anymore. It all mattered. It still matters. I know that now.

I’ve been watching you tonight, watching Sophie with Mara, and I finally see it. Amanda’s voice cracked slightly. She’s happy, Ethan. Genuinely happy. happier than she’s been since Sarah died. And Mara, she’s not trying to replace anyone. She’s just loving your daughter the way Sarah would want someone to love her if Sarah couldn’t be there. Ethan felt his throat tighten.

I miss her every single day. So does Sophie, but we can’t stop living because Sarah’s gone. I know. I’m sorry for making you feel like you had to choose between honoring her memory and finding happiness again. Amanda wiped at her eyes. For what it’s worth, I think Sarah would like Mara.

They’re nothing alike, but Sarah always valued honesty and intelligence and people who showed up when it mattered. Mara does all of that. Thank you for saying that. Will you tell her I’m sorry for what I said at the art exhibition? I was grieving and angry and I took it out on someone who didn’t deserve it. You can tell her yourself.

They walked back to where Mara waited with Sophie, who was showing Mara something on her phone and talking animatedly. Amanda approached cautiously and Mara’s posture shifted. Not defensive exactly, but wary. I owe you an apology, Amanda said to Mara. What I said at the art exhibition was unfair and cruel.

You weren’t playing house or replacing anyone. You were showing up for a child who needed you. I’m sorry for not seeing that sooner. Mara studied Amanda for a long moment, her expression carefully neutral. Grief makes people say things they don’t mean. I understand that. It’s not an excuse. No, but it’s an explanation.

Mara’s voice softened slightly. I can’t imagine what it’s like to lose a best friend. To watch her family continue without her. That must be incredibly painful. Amanda’s eyes filled with tears. It is. But watching Sophie tonight, seeing how confident and happy she is, I realized that Sarah would trade anything for Sophie to be okay. even her own memory.

And Sophie is okay because of you.” The words hung in the hallway, heavy with meaning. Around them, families continued their celebrations, oblivious to the reconciliation happening in their small corner. “Thank you,” Mara said finally. “That means more than you know.” Amanda nodded, then turned to Sophie.

“You were wonderful tonight, sweetheart. Your mom would be so proud.” Sophie’s face got that complicated expression children wear when someone mentions their dead parent. Part sadness, part confusion, part something else entirely. I wish she could have seen it. Me too, baby. Me, too. Amanda said her goodbyes and drifted back toward her family, leaving them in the thinning crowd.

Sophie grabbed both Ethan’s and Mara’s hand, swinging between them. Can we get ice cream now? I was really good, and I deserve it. You absolutely deserve it,” Ethan agreed. They drove to the ice cream shop in Mara’s car. She’d started driving them places more often, another small shift in their dynamic. Sophie chattered the entire way about the showcase, about which kids forgot their lines, about how the music teacher had complimented her projection.

The ice cream shop was moderately crowded for a Thursday night. They claimed a booth near the window, Sophie between them, all three with their preferred flavors. Superman for Sophie, vanilla for Ethan, mint chocolate chip for Mara. This is my favorite, Sophie announced, swinging her legs under the table.

Performing and then celebrating with ice cream. We should do this every week. I don’t think we can arrange a school showcase every week, Mara said, smiling. Then I’ll just perform for you at home. I can make up poems and everything. Sophie took a huge bite of ice cream, leaving rainbow traces on her upper lip. Will you always come to my school things, both of you? Always, Ethan promised without thinking.

What if you have work? What if there’s an emergency? Then we’ll do everything possible to be there anyway, Mara said. And if we absolutely can’t make it, we’ll tell you ahead of time and make it up to you after. Sophie seemed satisfied with this answer. Emma’s mom says her dad never comes to school things because he works too much. I’m glad you both come.

They finished their ice cream in comfortable quiet, Sophie occasionally pointing out cars passing by the window or people walking past. The evening felt complete, perfect, the kind of ordinary moment that felt extraordinary in its simplicity. “We should head home,” Ethan said finally, checking his watch.

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Disclaimer : This content may be created by AI for entertainment purposes. Any resemblance to real persons, events, or places is coincidental.

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