З життя
A Tense Encounter Between Two Hesitant Hearts
I remember that day distinctly, as if it were etched into the pages of an old diary. I, Alice, boarded the coach at the village green, just as I always did. The only spare seat was beside a gentleman who appeared a little older than myself. I scarcely glanced at him to begin with; my mind was preoccupied with all manner of urgent matters. Seven hours lay ahead before I would reach my parents house in Somerset, and my head brimmed with a jumbled list of troubles to sort out.
Once I settled into my seat and the coach rumbled out of town, a curious scent reached mea faint whiff of musk tinged with roasted coffee. It carried such bittersweetness that I was instantly swept into the tides of memory.
Suddenly, I was seventeen once more, basking in the warmth of a rare English summer. My first love, Thomas, was at my side, his scent identical to the one tickling my nose now. We lay on the riverbank in Wiltshire, the lush grass cool beneath us, the star-pricked sky overhead, kissing and whispering promises of forever. He swore he would never leave me, and I loved him so deeply I could have forsaken anythingmy studies, my hopes, my futurejust for a moment longer by his side.
But as life often unfolds, fate intervened. Thomas enlisted in the army, and though he wrote faithfully for a while, somewhere in the bustle of London he found another and married her. My heart was left shattered, the pieces never quite slotting together again. I couldn’t bring myself to court anyone else, even after a decade. Thomas remained vivid within me, his absence as real as any presence.
On that coach, wrapped in reflection, I glancedalmost without meaning toat the fellow beside me. My heart skipped, startled. Tall, dark hair, blue eyes, lips with just the faintest curvehe bore such a striking likeness to Thomas that for an instant, I thought my memory had conjured him.
Excuse me, is your name Thomas by any chance? I inquired, nervously.
He turned, a warm, easy grin spreading across his face. No, Im Edward, he replied. And you are?
Briefly lost for words, I managed, Im Alice. Pleased to meet you.
The pleasure is all mine, Alice, Edward said, smiling anew. Funny thing, you remind me of someone I once knew. My first love, in fact. We parted badlyshe chose someone elseand Ive thought of her these past ten years. Then I look up, and here you are. Still can’t quite believe it.
Astonished at the familiarity of his words, I blurted, Thats remarkable. I have almost the same story. You could pass for my first love, Thomas. Do these coincidences really happen?
Edward gave a gentle laugh. Perhaps they do. What do you say we exchange numbers? Continue the conversation once this journeys done?
Moved by a feeling I hadnt known in years, I agreed, and we began chatting as the countryside rolled past. Time made us wise, and perhaps fate had ushered in a second chancewith someone new, yet achingly familiar. After all, in those old English tales, there rarely are coincidencesonly the quiet orchestration of destiny.
