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Twenty Years Later, I Recognise My Younger Self in the Boy On the Eve of His Wedding, Arthur Suspected Martha of Cheating—Even Though She Swore She Was Faithful, He Refused to Listen. Two Decades On, He Met Her Son—His Spitting Image… They Shared a Storybook Romance—Passionate, Extraordinary, and the Envy of All Around Them. Just as They Prepared for the Wedding That Never Happened, Martha Revealed She Was Pregnant. Instead of Joy, Arthur Accused Her of Infidelity, Insisting the Baby Couldn’t Be His. Devastated, Martha Gave Birth and Raised the Child Alone, Despite Pleas from Friends Who Saw Her Devotion. Arthur Offered Abortion, but She Refused—and Waited in Vain for His Apology. They Lived Separate Lives. Whenever Their Paths Crossed, Arthur Looked Away, Refusing to Recall the Past He’d Buried. Raising Her Son as a Single Mum Was a Struggle, but Martha Poured Her Heart into It, Working Multiple Jobs to Give Him a Good Life. Her Son, Chris, Became Her Pride and Protector, Earning a Degree, Serving in the Forces, and Finding Work. He Stopped Asking About His Father—He Understood Without Words. At Twenty, Chris Was the Image of Arthur—The Man Martha Had Loved So Deeply. One Day, Their Paths Crossed: Martha, Arthur, and Chris, All Together. Arthur Couldn’t Deny the Likeness and Was Stunned into Silence. Three Days Later, Arthur Came to Martha and Asked, “Can You Forgive Me?” “Long Ago…” Martha Whispered. And So, the Stories of ‘Daddy’ Came Alive—As Chris Met His Father for the First Time.

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Twenty years later I see in this boy a spitting image of my younger self.

The evening before the wedding, Arthur became convinced Martha was having an affair. She swore up and down that she was entirely devoted to him, but he refused to listen. Two decades later, he happened to meet her sonwho could have been his twin at that age

Their love story could have been torn straight from the pages of a searing romantic novelpassionate, improbable, almost absurd in its size. People whispered enviously and caused mischief, poking their noses into the couples affairs as if it were an afternoon soap opera airing just for them. Arthur and Martha were ticking off the days until their wedding, a wedding that, heartbreaking as it was, would never actually happen.

The night before they were to be wed, Martha confided in her beloved that she was pregnant. Rather than celebrating, Arthur flew into a strop. He immediately accused her of being unfaithful. No one gets pregnant that quickly, he kept repeating, as if common sense had suddenly become a rare and expensive delicacy available only to him. He told her straight out that he didnt believe her. But Martha went ahead and had the baby.

His mates all told him he was being a prize idiot. Everyone could see Martha was helplessly in love with him. But he was immovablelike a bus stop at rush hour, come rain, snow, or unpleasant truths. The relationship collapsed, invitations were cancelled, and the wedding was a no-go. He even suggested she sort it out, but Martha stood firm. She waited, hoping for an apology until the very last minute that predictably never came.

She refused to call him. Arthur, serenely certain of his own wisdom, vanished from her life. Their roads forked and each toddled down the path to a new beginning, Martha left to deal solo with the aftermath of the whole debacle. On the odd occasion they crossed paths, Arthur would act as though Martha was someone selling vegan sausage rolls in the high streetinteresting, perhaps, but not something he fancied acknowledging. He once spotted her in the park, but always looked away, determined not to be ensnared by old memories.

Life as a single mum in England was never going to be easy, but Martha managed. She quietly gave up on her private life; her happiness came, instead, in the shape of a cheeky little cherub who gave her strength she didnt know she had.

She worked every job she could find to secure a future for her son, Chris. He grew up knowing his mum was his whole support squad, personal cheerleader, and chief defender.

Chris excelledgood schools, joined the army, got a proper job (the sort his mum could crow about to nosy neighbours). Eventually, he stopped asking who his father was, because deep down, hed figured it out. Sure, Martha had told him bedtime tales about his dad when he was littlebut how much did he ever really believe?

Chris was, without a doubt, his fathers doppelgänger. At twenty, looking at him was like rolling back the years to the young Arthur whod stolen Marthas heart so completely. Then, one grey and drizzly day, fate decided it was time for a bit of cosmic slapsticktheir paths crossed: Martha, Arthur, and Chris, all in the same place. The resemblance was, frankly, impossible to ignore. Arthur stared for a long time, gobsmacked, but the Queen herself would have been less likely to make a scene.

Three days later, Arthur knocked on Marthas door and asked, sheepishly:
Do you think you could ever forgive me?
I didages ago Martha whispered.

And so, the long-lost tales of Dad finally got a new chapterChris saw his father for the first time, and everything finally made a curious, almost cinematic sort of sense.

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