Then, a few minutes later, he would enter the bedroom carrying two cups of coffee carefully in trembling hands.
And every single time, he would say the exact same thing:
—Good morning, my wife.
As if he still couldn’t believe it was true.
The first year of our marriage had not been easy.
There were doctor appointments.
Scares.
Arguments with family.
Days when Manuel’s heart problems frightened me more than I admitted.
But love at our age stopped being about grand gestures.
It became smaller.
And somehow… deeper.
Love became him remembering to warm my side of the bed before I lay down.
It became me organizing his medication every Sunday night.
It became sitting silently on the porch while the sun disappeared behind the mountains.
No pressure to impress.
No games.
No pride.
Just companionship.
His son eventually came back.
Not immediately.
Not dramatically.
Life softened him slowly.
One afternoon, he arrived unexpectedly with his little daughter.
A shy six-year-old with curly hair and enormous eyes.
She hid behind his leg at first.
Then she looked at Manuel and asked innocently:
—Are you really Grandpa’s new wife?
I laughed so hard I almost cried.
Her father looked mortified.
But Manuel simply smiled.
—No, sweetheart.
He pointed at me proudly.
—She’s the love of my life.
I felt my cheeks grow warm like a teenage girl again.
Over time, the resentment faded.
Not completely.
Some wounds never disappear entirely.
But people grow tired of carrying anger forever.
Especially when they see happiness is genuine.
One winter night, Manuel and I sat wrapped in blankets watching old photographs.
Young faces.
Lost relatives.
People already gone.
Entire decades trapped inside fading paper.
I found an old picture of us from high school.
I stared at it for a long moment.
We looked ridiculous.
Young.
Skinny.
Certain the world belonged to us.
Manuel leaned closer beside me.
—Look at that boy —he laughed softly.— He had no idea how difficult life would become.
I smiled sadly.