A Single Dad Was Rejected on a Christmas Blind Date — Then a Stranger Asked, “Be My Husband” – Part 2

The piano shifted into silver bells. Someone called for more wine. The couple in the corner booth kissed softly. I What? Mara set down her glass with deliberate care. I’m 34 years old. I founded a tech startup when I was 26. Data analytics for healthcare systems. We went public 2 years ago. I’m worth approximately $47 million, give or take whatever the stock did today.

I haven’t checked. Ethan had no idea how to respond to that. I’ve been proposed to 11 times in the last 3 years, Mara continued, her voice matter of fact, like she was presenting a business case. Not one of those men knew my middle name. Not one of them could tell you my favorite book or what I’m afraid of or what I wanted to be when I was 7 years old. They knew my net worth.

They knew my company’s valuation. They knew what dating me could do for their careers. She leaned forward slightly and Ethan caught the faint scent of something clean and subtle. Lavender maybe, or sage. 3 months ago, I went on a date with a venture capitalist, very handsome, very successful in his own right.

Halfway through dinner, he told me he’d already calculated what our combined assets would be after marriage. He had a prenup drafted. He’d planned our entire financial future. Her laugh was hollow. He still couldn’t remember if I preferred coffee or tea. That’s Ethan searched for the right word. Depressing. That’s reality for me anyway.

Mara traced the rim of her wine glass with one finger. I can’t have children, Ethan. Endometriosis. Multiple surgeries. The doctors were very clear. And do you know what happened when I told my fianceé? my actual fiance, the man I’d been with for four years. Do you know what he said? Ethan shook his head, already dreading the answer.

He said, “I can’t build a legacy with broken parts.” Her voice didn’t waver, but something flickered in her eyes, an old wound, not quite healed. He left 6 days before our wedding. Took the ring, took the deposits, took his genetic potential elsewhere. “That’s accurate,” Mara’s smile was sharp. He wasn’t wrong. Technically, I am broken in the very specific way that matters to men who want biological heirs.

I just thought we were building something different. My mistake. The waiter approached their table, then seemed to sense the intensity of the conversation and veered away toward the kitchen. “So, here’s my situation,” Mara said, shifting in her seat. “I’m exhausted. I’m tired of men who want my money and resent my success. I’m tired of being treated like a fertility problem instead of a person.

I’m tired of first dates where they’ve already looked up my company’s quarterly earnings. And I’m especially tired of being alone on Christmas, sitting in restaurants watching other people’s happiness. She met his eyes directly, and Ethan felt the full force of her attention, sharp, analytical, and somehow vulnerable beneath it all.

You just got rejected for the one thing that should make you more attractive, not less. You’re a father. You show up. You care enough to keep trying despite repeated humiliation. You sent that woman a photo of your daughter with such obvious pride that it was visible from 3 ft away. You saw that. I’m observant.

It’s my job. Mara paused. Here’s what I’m proposing. Not romance. Not love at first sight. Not some fantasy where we pretend this is anything other than what it is. Two people who are tired of being alone, tired of being rejected for the wrong reasons, and willing to be honest about what they actually need.

Ethan’s heart was beating faster now. A mix of confusion and something he couldn’t quite name. I don’t understand what you’re asking. I’m asking if you want to try something different, something real. A partnership based on honesty instead of hormones, compatibility instead of chemistry.

She leaned back, giving him space. You need someone who won’t run from your daughter. Someone who wants to be a family, not just playhouse until something better comes along. I need someone who sees me as a person, not a portfolio. Someone who won’t blame me for what my body can’t do. This is insane, Ethan said, but he didn’t stand up. Probably.

But is it more insane than what you’ve been doing? How many more Jennifers are you willing to endure? How many more times are you going to watch your daughter’s photo become a dealbreaker? The words hit home. Ethan thought of Sophie’s face when he’d left tonight. How she’d hugged him extra tight and whispered, “Find someone nice, daddy.

” How she’d started asking if she was the reason he was always alone. How a 7-year-old child had somehow internalized the idea that she was an obstacle to his happiness. “I have one condition,” Mara said. “You let me meet Sophie. Not tomorrow, not next week, but soon. If she hates me, we walk away. If I can’t be what she needs, we stop.

This only works if she chooses it, too. You want my daughter to decide if you become her stepmother? Ethan’s voice rose slightly. That’s That’s too much pressure for a kid. No. Mars voice softened. I want your daughter to decide if she wants me in her life. There’s a difference. Kids know things adults forget.

They know who’s genuine, who’s present, who actually cares. If Sophie and I can’t build something real, then you and I don’t have a foundation anyway. The piano music shifted again, something slower and sadder. I’ll be home for Christmas. The version that always made Ethan think of soldiers overseas, of empty chairs at holiday tables. Why me? He asked finally.

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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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