His Blind Date Cancelled—Then a Single Dad Found a Billionaire CEO Crying Alone – Part 16

Tommy arrived early, uncomfortable in borrowed clothes, carrying a flask he claimed was for emergencies. You nervous? Marcus considered the question while adjusting Danny’s collar. No, should be probably but mostly I’m just ready. Ready for this part to be over so we can start the next part. Tommy nodded like this made sense.

Sarah would be proud of you. Moving on without forgetting. Not everyone manages that. The mention of Sarah brought the familiar ache, gentler now than it used to be. I think she’d like Cat. They’re different but something about the core, the way they both fight for what they believe in even when it cost them.

Danny looked up. Mom would definitely like Cat. She told me once that what matters is finding people who make you better. Cat makes both of us better. The ceremony site glowed with afternoon light filtered through clouds. Roses bloomed in October defiance, reds and yellows and oranges painting the garden. Chairs arranged in simple rows, no elaborate decorations beyond what nature provided. Guests gathered in clusters.

The strange mix of two worlds learning to occupy the same space. Tommy looking uncomfortable next to Catherine’s nonprofit colleagues. Mrs. Chen chatting with the Rodriguez grandparents. A few of Catherine’s Bridge Academy families attending with their children. Evidence of the work that had given her purpose.

Music started, something classical Catherine had chosen, played through a Bluetooth speaker because a live quartet exceeded budget. Marcus took his position, Danny beside him clutching rings with the seriousness of nuclear launch codes. Then Catherine appeared at the end of the aisle and everything else faded.

She walked alone, no one to give her away because she wasn’t property to transfer. The vintage dress caught light, lace and history and beauty without pretension. Her face held joy so complete it was almost painful to witness. The expression of someone who’d expected to spend her life performing happiness and instead found the real thing.

Marcus forgot the words he’d memorized, forgot the assembled guests, the camera recording everything, the elaborate plans they’d made. Only Catherine existed walking toward him through a garden in October, choosing him when she could have had anyone. The officiant, a friend of Mrs. Chen’s who’d been ordained online specifically for this occasion, kept the ceremony simple.

Brief remarks about love and commitment, the choosing of each other through difficulty, the family they’d built from broken pieces. Then Danny stepped forward, unscripted. “Can I say something?” Catherine and Marcus exchanged glances. Danny hadn’t mentioned wanting to speak. “When Mom died, I was really scared that Dad would be sad forever.

That we’d always feel like something was missing.” Danny’s voice carried clear across the garden, steady despite his age. “Then Cat showed up. And at first I thought she was just someone new. But then I figured out she was the person Mom sent us.” He looked at Catherine directly. “You came to our house and didn’t care about the stains or the mess or that Dad sometimes forgets to buy groceries.

You learned to make terrible pancakes just so we could eat breakfast together. You listen when I talk about Mom like it’s important instead of weird.” His voice cracked slightly. “Today you’re officially family, but you’ve been family since the first time you read me a space book with different voices and didn’t act like I was crazy for believing in wormholes.

He turned to include both of them. Mom said real love is being brave enough to keep choosing someone even when it’s hard. You keep choosing each other. That’s how I know it’s real. Silence held for a moment, heavy with emotion. Catherine wiped her eyes. Marcus felt his own threatening. Thank you, Danny. The officiant recovered first.

I don’t think anyone could say it better. Vows came next, simple promises, nothing elaborate. Marcus spoke first. I promise to love you when you burn dinner and when you forget that budget exists. When you cry about things that seem small and when you fight battles that seem too big. I promise to see the woman in the parking lot, the real one brave enough to fall apart whenever you start believing you have to perform perfection again.

Catherine’s voice shook but held. I promise to love you when the furnace breaks and the bank account’s scary and the world doesn’t make sense. When Danny asks questions neither of us can answer and when grief shows up uninvited. I promise to keep showing up every single day because showing up is everything and I finally understand that now.

Rings exchanged, Catherine’s simple band matching the engagement diamond, Marcus’s plain gold. The officiant pronounced them married and Marcus kissed his wife for the first time in that garden of roses while Danny cheered loud enough to startle birds. The reception that followed felt like a neighborhood party rather than a society event.

Catering came from a local restaurant that owed Marcus for fixing their walk-in cooler. The cake was three tiers from a bakery that charged by the hour rather than the slice. Music played through speakers rigged up by Tommy who turned out to have unexpected DJ opinions. Catherine danced with Danny first, his request honored without question.

They swayed together to something slow, the 9-year-old’s head against her shoulder, both of them grinning at Marcus across the dance floor. “She’s really my mom now, right?” Danny asked loud enough for nearby guests to hear. Catherine’s arms tightened around him. “If you want me to be.” “I do.

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Disclaimer: This story is a work of fiction created for entertainment purposes. Any resemblance to real persons, events, or places is coincidental.

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