I thought I knew why my future collapsed one week before my wedding. It took thirty years for me to learn how much of the truth I had never known.I was thirty-two when I met Robert, a kind widower raising ten children alone after his wife passed away. I met him in a grocery store while he struggled with an overflowing cart and a toddler named Sophie who reached for me. I smiled at her, Robert apologized, and somehow that small moment changed my life.
I didn’t only fall in love with Robert. I fell in love with all ten children. Amanda, Derrick, Sue, Jacob, David, the quadruplets, and little Sophie slowly became my family. Within months, I was helping with homework, cooking dinner, finding lost socks, and kissing scraped knees.
Six months later, Robert proposed at dinner with all ten children listening from the hallway. “Will you marry us?” he asked. I said yes through tears. My mother thought I was making a terrible mistake, but I didn’t listen. Those children already felt like mine.
Two weeks before the wedding, I tried on my dress while Amanda zipped it and Sophie clapped. Robert appeared in the doorway and said softly, “You look beautiful.” When I told him he wasn’t supposed to see the dress, he answered, “I know. I just wanted to remember.”
PART 2
One week before the wedding, Robert disappeared. His truck was gone, his phone was off, and no one had seen him. Then I found a note on the kitchen table that said, “I’m sorry. I can’t do this anymore.” No explanation. No goodbye.
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My mother told me to leave and let the system take the children. Relatives and friends said the same thing. They told me I was too young to throw my life away.