A Single Dad Was Rejected on a Christmas Blind Date — Then a Stranger Asked, “Be My Husband” – Part 4

I love you, Sophie girl. Love you. Infinity, daddy. Infinity. That’s what his daughter believed in. Infinite love, infinite possibility, infinite second chances. Maybe she was on to something. Ethan got in his car, turned on the heat, and sat there while the engine warmed and snow accumulated on the windshield.

Through the frosted glass, he could still see the restaurant. Warm light spilling onto the snowy sidewalk, people celebrating inside, completely unaware that in the corner booth, someone’s entire life had just tilted sideways. Tomorrow he would meet Mara Lewis for coffee. Tomorrow he would ask his hundred questions and hear her answers and decide if this crazy proposition had even a shred of possibility.

Tomorrow he would figure out how to explain to his daughter that sometimes the best things come from the worst moments and that love, if you could call it that, sometimes looked nothing like you expected. But tonight, on Christmas night, with snow falling and his daughter’s question mark still visible in his mind, Ethan allowed himself to believe that maybe, just maybe, the story wasn’t over.

Maybe there were more chapters waiting. Maybe broken pieces could build something new. Maybe a stranger’s question in a crowded restaurant was actually the answer he’d been looking for all along. He cleared the snow from his windshield, put the car in gear, and drove toward Marcus and Cla’s house to pick up his daughter. Sophie would be waiting, covered in frosting and questions, ready to hear about her father’s night.

And for the first time in 3 years, Ethan had something approaching a good story to tell. The snow fell harder, covering Portland in white, making everything clean and new and full of strange, terrifying possibility. In his pocket, his phone held a stranger’s number and the promise of coffee at 2 p.m. Can you be my new husband? The question followed him through the snowy streets, not demanding an answer yet, just presenting a possibility.

A door opening in a wall he’d thought was solid. A question mark where his daughter had drawn one, waiting to be filled with something, someone real. Ethan didn’t know if Mara Lewis was the answer, but for the first time in years, he was willing to find out. The coffee shop near Pioneer Square was the kind of place that tried too hard to be quirky.

Mismatched furniture. Edison bulbs hanging from exposed pipes, a chalkboard menu written in unnecessarily elaborate script. Ethan arrived 15 minutes early, a nervous habit he’d developed in his consulting days when being late meant losing clients. Now it just meant more time to second guessess every decision that had led him to this moment.

He ordered a black coffee he didn’t want and claimed a table by the window where he could watch the Saturday afternoon foot traffic. The snow from last night had mostly melted, leaving Portland gray and damp and ordinary again. Magic never lasted in daylight. His phone showed 1:47 p.m.

13 minutes until he either started the strangest relationship of his life or confirmed that last night had been some kind of stress induced hallucination brought on by public humiliation and too much holiday loneliness. Sophie was at a birthday party for one of her classmates, giving him until 4:00 before pickup. He told Marcus about the coffee meeting, but not the proposal.

How did you explain that a stranger had offered marriage over rejected wine and shared misery? Marcus would think he’d lost his mind. Clare would start planning a wedding or an intervention, possibly both. The door chimed. Mara Lewis walked in wearing dark jeans, boots, and a forest green jacket that made her eyes look even more startling than they had in the restaurant’s dim lighting.

She spotted him immediately. No hesitation, no pretense of looking around first. Direct, purposeful. Everything about her movement suggested someone who didn’t waste time on uncertainty. You came, she said, sliding into the chair across from him. No preamble, no small talk. I said I would. People say a lot of things they don’t mean, especially after witnessing public rejection and receiving marriage proposals from strangers.

But she signaled the barista with a small wave. I’ve had 16 hours to regret last night. Decided around 3 this morning that I’d either made the best decision of my life or completely sabotaged any chance of normal human interaction ever again. Which one did you land on? Still deciding you? Ethan wrapped his hands around his coffee cup, feeling the warmth seep into his palms.

I wrote down questions, actual questions on paper like I was preparing for a business meeting. Then I threw the paper away because it felt insane. Then I rewrote them on my phone. Show me. He hesitated, then pulled out his phone and handed it over. Mara scrolled through his notes, her expression unreadable. The barista brought her an Americano without being asked.

Apparently, she was a regular here, and Mara nodded her thanks without looking up. These are good questions, she said finally, handing the phone back. Thorough. Maybe a little formal, but good. Should we go through them in order or should I just start talking and see what we cover? I don’t know the protocol for this.

Is there a protocol for this? Not that I’m aware of. She took a sip of her coffee, watching him over the rim. Okay, let’s start with the most important one. Why marriage? Why not just dating? Why not seeing where things go organically? Ethan had been wondering the same thing all night. That was my first question actually because organic hasn’t worked for either of us.

Because dating is performance and I’m tired of performing because if we’re going to do this, we need to do it with intention and honesty, not just drift along hoping chemistry saves us from incompatibility. Mara set down her cup with deliberate care. When my fianceé left, I did all the things you’re supposed to do. therapy, self-help books, dating apps, putting myself out there, and every single relationship followed the same pattern.

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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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