Since my mother left five years ago, a blanket of silence and loneliness had settled over my childhood home. My father, a man who seemed to have aged a decade overnight, remained there in our town, surrounded by the ghosts of a life we had shared. I, meanwhile, tried to build my future as a junior at university, in a noisy, anonymous city that contrasted sharply with the quiet of my home. I had grown accustomed to his solitude, his brief phone calls, and his voice tinged with perpetual melancholy. In my mind, I had accepted an unspoken truth: my father would remain alone forever, faithful to the memory of my mother, a sanctuary that no new love could or would dare to desecrate.
But one Thursday afternoon, the phone shattered that certainty. “Nam, come home this weekend. I have something important to tell you.” My father’s voice on the other end of the line was unusually deep, firm, and lacked the fragility that had become his trademark. My heart skipped a beat. Something important? My father was a man of few words, an expert at concealing his emotions. His calls were usually limited to asking if I had eaten well or if I needed money. He had never used that tone before. That night, sleep eluded me. I tossed and turned, my mind caught in a whirlwind of unsettling conjectures, each more improbable than the last.
On Saturday morning, I got in my car and started the drive home. The familiar landscape, the rows of trees I’d watched grow, the old tiled roofs of the village—it all seemed strangely foreign, as if I were seeing it for the first time through a veil of apprehension. With every kilometer I brought home, a sense of foreboding pressed harder in my chest. When I reached our street, I saw that the front door was open.
And there, on the porch, was Dad. But he wasn’t alone. Beside him, a woman. I froze a few feet from the entrance. My gaze instinctively drifted down to her belly, a round, prominent bump that, beneath the thin summer dress, screamed an undeniable secret. I felt like I couldn’t breathe, my breath catching painfully in my throat. “No… impossible…” I whispered to myself, a desperate denial against the evidence before my eyes.
The woman looked up at me, and in that precise moment, the ground disappeared beneath my feet. I was breathless, speechless, and thoughtless. The whole world shrank to her face, to those eyes I knew so well. It was Lan. Lan, my old classmate. Lan, the girl with the shy smile and long, dark hair. Lan, the person I had loved in a devoted and painful silence throughout my adolescence, the protagonist of my dreams and most cherished memories, the one to whom I never, ever, had the courage to confess my feelings.
I felt my legs turn to ice, my mind a whirlwind of disbelief and horror. The scene before me wasn’t just a shock; it was annihilation. It was stripping everything from me: my past, my present, and the sacred image of the family I once had. My father stood up, his voice distant and distorted, as if it were coming from the other side of a tunnel. “I… Nam, let me explain…”

But I couldn’t listen to him. I didn’t want to. A dam of pain broke inside me, and tears, hot, bitter, and furious, began to flow uncontrollably. I turned and ran. I ran aimlessly, driven only by the desire to escape that image, that unbearable truth, ignoring my father’s desperate, sorrowful calls behind me.
I ran to the riverbank, our place. The place where, as a child, my mother had taught me to fly kites. The place where we sat together on cold afternoons, watching the water flow. I collapsed onto the damp grass and, with my hands on my head, I screamed. A senseless scream, a howl of pain directed at the sky, at life, at fate. Why? Why her? Why Lan? The person who had held a sacred and untouchable place in my youth was now beside my father, carrying a drop of his blood, about to become my stepmother.
I don’t know how much time passed, but finally, I felt a hand on my shoulder. It was my father. He sat down beside me, the silence between us heavy, laden with all that we couldn’t say. Finally, he sighed. “Nam, I know you’re confused. But I don’t want to hide anything from you. I’ve been alone for many years, son. A loneliness that eats away at you from the inside. I met Lan by chance, at the market. We started talking, confiding our sorrows. She loves your father very much, and… she loves you too.”
I jumped to my feet, facing him, letting all my bitterness rise to the surface. “But do you know?” I snapped. “Do you know what she’s meant to me? She’s occupied my every thought since my youth! I’ve idealized her for years! And now she’s going to be my father’s wife? Do you understand what that means?”
My father’s silence was his only response. His eyes reddened, but he remained composed. “No, I didn’t know. And if I had known… perhaps I would have thought differently. Nam, you have to understand… the feelings of youth are just memories. They’re beautiful, but they’re part of the past. Now, the reality is that Lan and her baby need a home, a family. And I need companionship.”
I laughed, a hollow, broken laugh. His words, so logical and yet so cruel, were like a knife slowly turning in my heart. Memories? For him, my love was a mere memory. For me, it was an open wound.
The next day, Lan came to see me. He stood before me, his eyes filled with fearful doubt, his voice barely a tremor. “Nam… forgive me. I know you felt something for me, but we were both young. I care about you a lot, I really do, but I never thought we could be together. Life takes us down strange paths and… in the end, I’m with your father. I don’t want to hurt you.”
I stopped, closed my eyes, and clenched my fists. “You didn’t mean to hurt me, but you chose my father. Do you realize that hurts a thousand times more than any rejection?”
Lan burst into tears, clutching her belly as if she wanted to protect the baby from my pain, from my rage. Seeing that scene, a toxic mix of hatred, sadness, anger, and helplessness overwhelmed me.
That night, desperate to find an anchor in the midst of the storm, I searched in the old drawer of my desk where I kept the last letter my mother wrote to me before she died. Her familiar handwriting appeared before me, and her words echoed from beyond the grave.
— “Nam, my son, I only wish that you live with kindness, that you love people, and that you value your family above all else. If one day your father finds his way again, forgive him and do not abandon him . ”
My tears fell onto the paper, smudging the ink. My heart was broken and saved at the same time. Broken by reality, saved by his unconditional love.
The wedding day arrived, inevitable and bleak. I stood outside the small village church, watching my father in his simple suit, and Lan, in a white dress that couldn’t quite conceal her pregnancy, gently caressing her belly. My heart pounded wildly. Part of me wanted to burst in, to shout “No!”, to stop this painful charade. But my feet seemed glued to the ground, anchored by my mother’s last wish.
In the end, I didn’t go in. I left an envelope with some money in the mailbox at home, with a simple note: — “I can’t bless you, but I can’t hate you either. I’m leaving. I hope you’re happy . “
I turned around and started walking away. The wedding music began playing behind me, and every joyful note seemed to trample my own heart. My youth, my first love, my family… everything had shattered in that instant.
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