З життя
Thomas felt the blood drain from his face. His left hand instinctively covered his right wrist, where a faint, jagged scar from a teenage accident hid beneath his starched white cuff
Thomas felt the blood drain from his face. His left hand instinctively covered his right wrist, where a faint, jagged scar from a teenage accident hid beneath his starched white cuff. He couldn’t move. His boots felt glued to the floor.
From the front row, Victoria suddenly stood up, her pearls clinking loudly. Her face wasn’t filled with confusion—it was frozen in absolute terror. She stared not at the boy’s face, but at the cheap plastic snow globe he was holding.
“”Get this child out of here immediately!”” Victoria commanded, her voice cracking despite her attempt to sound authoritative. “”Security, please! This is a sacred ceremony!””
But the little boy didn’t run. Instead, he dropped to his knees, his hands shaking so hard that the plastic snow globe slipped and crashed against the hard stone floor. The cheap plastic split open. Murky water and cheap glitter spilled across the white silk runner, along with a small, waterlogged piece of paper that had been sealed in the base.
Victoria rushed forward, trying to step on the paper, but Thomas was faster. Disregarding his expensive tuxedo, he dropped to his hands and knees, scooping up the wet, blurred note.
The handwriting was unmistakably Julianne’s—the girl he had loved with every fiber of his being six years ago, the girl his mother had driven away, the girl he was told had tragically lost their unborn baby in another state.
The ink was bleeding, but the words were still sharp enough to cut: “Thomas, they told me you chose your inheritance over us. But I want our son, Leo, to know his father’s name. I never stopped loving you.”
Thomas stared at the wet paper, the world spinning around him. The whispers of the high-society guests faded into a dull roar. He slowly turned his gaze toward his mother. Victoria was trembling, her hands pressed against her mouth, her eyes pleading for him not to say anything.
“”You told me she lost the baby, Mother,”” Thomas said. His voice wasn’t loud, but it carried a deadly, freezing weight that silenced the entire chapel. “”You told me she took the money and left because she didn’t want a family.””
“”Thomas, please… your wedding,”” Eleanor hissed, grabbing his arm, trying to pull him back to the altar. “”We can deal with this scandal later! Think about our families!””
Thomas looked at Eleanor, seeing her clearly for the first time—seeing the obsession with image, the lack of warmth. Gently but firmly, he removed her hand from his arm. He took off his boutonniere and dropped it into the wet puddle of glitter on the floor.
He walked away from the altar, away from his mother, and away from the life that had been meticulously arranged for him.
Thomas knelt on the damp silk runner right in front of the little boy. The child was crying now, frightened by the tension in the room, clutching his empty, broken toy. Thomas didn’t care about the mud or the ruined clothes. He pulled the boy into his arms, burying his face in the child’s damp, rain-scented hair.
“”I’m not mad you came, Leo,”” Thomas whispered into his son’s ear, his own tears finally spilling over. “”I’m just so sorry it took me five years to find you. Let’s go home.””
Without looking back at the altar or the crowd, Thomas lifted his son into his arms and walked out into the crisp autumn air, leaving the ghost of his past behind.”
