I spent weeks crocheting the perfect Maid of Honor dress for my 10-year-old daughter. She twirled like a fairy princess when she tried it on. But the day before my wedding, I found out what my future mother-in-law had done to it, and my heart broke.
I never forgave her, and karma handled the rest.
Love after heartbreak feels different. It’s cautious but hopeful. When my first marriage crumbled five years ago, I thought my chance at happiness was over.
Lucy was just five then, her tiny fingers wrapped around mine as we moved into our cramped apartment.
“It’s okay, Mommy,” she whispered that first night. “It’s our cozy castle now.” That’s Lucy for you. She’s always been my anchor when the world felt unsteady.
So when Ryan walked into our lives two years ago, Lucy’s opinion mattered more than anything.
After everything we’d been through together, her trust didn’t come easily. I held my breath during their first meeting at the park, my palms actually sweating as I watched them size each other up. Would she like him?
Would he see what I saw in her—this incredible little soul who’d been my strength through everything?
I needn’t have worried. Within minutes, Ryan was pushing Lucy on the swings while she giggled about her latest art project, something involving glitter and what she called “rainbow dragons.” He listened to every word like she was telling him the secrets of the universe, asking follow-up questions that made her beam with pride.
“He’s nice, Mom,” she said later, chocolate ice cream smeared on her chin and down the front of her favorite purple shirt. “He doesn’t talk to me like I’m a baby.”
That’s when I knew…
really knew that our family was going to be perfect.
When Ryan proposed six months ago, Lucy was more excited than I was. She’d been in on the plan, apparently helping him pick out the ring during a “secret mission” to the jewelry store.
“Do I get to wear a fancy dress?” She asked, bouncing on her toes like a little kangaroo.
“Better than that, sweetie,” I said, my heart swelling with the kind of love that makes your chest ache in the best way. “You’re going to be my maid of honor.”
Her eyes went wide, bigger than I’d ever seen them.
“Really? Like a grown-up lady?”
“Exactly like that.” I pulled her into a hug. “My most important grown-up lady.”
I’ve been crocheting since I was 15, when my high school guidance counselor suggested I find something constructive to do with my restless energy.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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