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While on Holiday at a Health Spa, I Signed Up for a Dance Night—When He Reached for My Hand, I Froze: It Was My First Boyfriend from Sixth Form

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While on a little retreat at a seaside spa in Bournemouth, I impulsively signed up for an evening dance. Romantic escapades werent on my agendaI simply wanted a break from the daily grind, to bask in the glow of live music, and to shake a leg for old times sake.

The ballroom was buzzing, scattered with all sorts: widows with fresh perms, gents in ill-fitting suits, and two portly chaps battling over a pork pie at the buffet. I had on a floaty, floral dressjust summery enough to make me feel less like a recovering office worker and more like a sixth-former at her first disco. As I soaked in the whiff of hair lacquer and gin, suddenly I felt a hand tap my shoulder.

May I have this dance? came a familiar male voice. I turned, humouring myself with the prospect of a dance with a strangerexcept, of course, he wasnt a stranger at all. My heart did a spectacular leap. There stood Edward. My first ever boyfriend, the one who used to scribble cringeworthy poems in the margins of my books and walk me right up to the garden gate, no matter the weather.

My knees threatened mutiny. Edward? I squeaked. He grinned with the same roguish twist I remembered from skipping maths to eat chips on the school wall. Hello, Lucy, he said, as if it were only yesterday. Fancy a spin?

We stepped onto the little parquet and the hotel band (unapologetically retro) struck up some Benny Goodman. We whirled about as if wed never stopped. Edward still remembered how I liked a confident lead, but minus the rugby tackles. For a moment there, I truly was eighteen again, dreaming that life was all possibilities.

During a break we orbited over to a wonky table in the corner, where the air was thick with perfume, pineapple cubes and nostalgia. Honestly, I never thought Id see you again, Edward said, fiddling with his cuff. After A-Levels life happened so fast. Uni, work, three years in Leeds, you name it. Suddenly, forty years gone.

I told him about my marriage, ended amicably as one might return a library bookno hard feelings, just overdue. The kids now grown and lost to London. He spoke softly of losing his wife three years back, and learning to make friends with empty kitchens and the alarm clock. Listening to him, I realised we still spoke the same private languagehalf-jokes, sideways glances, conversations that seemed to finish themselves.

When the band tuned up again, Edward offered his arm. One more dance? he asked. That one more stretched gloriously on, dance after dance, chat after chat, both of us entirely aware that this was not just a meeting of two bored spa-goers. Not that fate cares for subtlety.

At the end of the dance, we slipped outside onto the veranda. A soft mist rolled off the Channel, and the promenade lights cast that honeyed gloom that makes everything look a bit romantic. You do recall I once promised wed dance together at sixty? he said suddenly. My jaw fairly droppedId forgotten that ludicrous little bet, made at seventeen under the strictest confidence and a packet of crisps. And here I am, keeping my word, he laughed.

Something lodged in my throat. My whole life, Id assumed first loves were precious precisely because they faded. That if they lasted, theyd lose their sparkle. But here Edward stood, silver-haired and wrinkled, and I could still see the boy who made the world seem sunnier.

I wandered back to my room with my heart galloping, just as it had at eighteen. This clearly wasnt chance. Sometimes, fate hands you a do-overnot to rehash old stories, but to finally live them right.

So, naturally, when Edward invited me for a sunrise stroll along the sand the next morning, I didnt hesitate for a second. The sun was barely peeking out, painting the sea with streaks of gold and pink, and the beach was deliciously empty except for a bickering couple with a bucket of shells and a flock of squawking gulls.

We walked in silence, our toes freezing in the incoming tide. Edward spoke of his years after college: bouncing around the country, chasing jobs, always one adventure away from contentmentbut apparently not from me. Each word seemed to sweep away four decades of quiet hesitation.

At one point, Edward stooped and handed me a small, glistening pebble. You know, when I was little I thought these were bits of sunshine that had sunk into the sea, he mused. Maybe this one will bring you luck, he said, with a shy smile.

I tucked the stone into my palm, surprised that it felt warm despite the chilly waves. Looking at him, I saw the man hed become and the boy who once made school seem bearable in the depths of winter.

We wandered for ages, but it might just as well have been minutes. Edward kept moving the hair from my face the same way he used to, and I realised that I didnt want this to be some soppy footnote to remember fondly. I wanted a real chanceno safety nets, just us as we are now.

That evening, perched on the sanatorium terrace, the two of us watched the sun fizzle out over the sea. Nothing needed sayingjust the kind of hush that makes you feel entirely safe. Edward gently took my hand and said, Maybe life really does have a sense of humour the second time round. And for the first time in a long while, I dared to believe him.

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