
I was sixty years old when I married again.
For a long time, I had believed my life was already finished. Five years earlier, my wife had passed away, and since then, every evening ended the same way—me unlocking the door to a silent house, eating alone, sleeping alone. I told myself this was what old age looked like, and I accepted it.
Everything changed the night I went to visit an old friend.
That evening, I saw his daughter—young, unmarried, standing quietly by the window. I can’t explain what happened in that moment. It wasn’t desire, not at first. It was something softer, deeper. Loneliness recognized loneliness. Pain recognized pain.
We began to talk. One conversation became many. Hours passed like minutes. With her, I felt heard again. Seen. And somehow, impossibly, she felt the same. Despite the years between us, something warm and real grew—something neither of us had planned, but neither of us could deny.
Her father was furious when he found out.
“You will disgrace this family!” he shouted. He locked her out, forbade her to see me. She wrote letters in secret. I waited outside their gate like a fool, hoping for a glimpse of her face. We were kept apart, but our love did not fade—it hardened, like steel forged in fire.
We fought for the right to be together. And in the end, against all resistance, we won.
Our wedding day felt like the start of a second life. I felt young again. She smiled the entire day, radiant and gentle. I truly believed that only happiness waited for us.
That night, in our room, my hands trembling with care, I began to unbutton her wedding dress.
And then I saw it.
Under the lace, deep, fresh wounds crossed her back.
I froze. My breath caught in my chest. She turned her face away, tears shining in her eyes.

“It was my father,” she whispered. “All this time… he beat me. He said I was a disgrace to him and to the family.”
Something broke inside me.
All those days when we fought for our love—she had been paying for it with her body, in silence. I felt pain, rage, and shame crash over me at once.
I held her carefully, afraid even my touch might hurt her, and I said the only words that mattered:
“You will never be alone again. I swear to you, I will protect you.”
That night was not the beginning of a simple, happy marriage.
It was a vow.
For the rest of my life, I would stand by her side—and never allow anyone to hurt her again.

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