Alive.
I reached into my pocket.
Emma immediately laughed through tears.
“You’re serious?”
“I’ve never been more serious.”
I knelt before her.
People nearby turned to watch, but I only saw Emma.
The woman I had almost lost forever.
“Emma Parker,” I said softly, “I failed you once. I can’t erase that. But if you let me, I want to spend the rest of my life loving you properly.”
Tears streamed down her face.
“Yes.”
The people around us clapped, but neither of us cared.
In that moment, it felt like the whole world had disappeared.
Our second wedding was small.
No ballroom.
No grand celebration.
Just a quiet lakeside ceremony with a handful of close friends. Lucas stood beside me. Ryan cried embarrassingly hard during the vows. Emma walked toward me beneath soft spring sunlight looking happier than I had ever seen her.
This time, when we exchanged vows, we made no promises about perfect futures.
No fantasies.
Only honesty.
Only love.
Only gratitude for surviving.
After the ceremony, Emma placed two tiny white flowers into the lake.
“For them,” she whispered.
Our unborn children.
I wrapped my arms around her gently.
The flowers drifted away across the water.
And somehow, instead of grief, we felt closure.
One year later, on a rainy afternoon, Emma stood frozen inside a pharmacy bathroom holding a pregnancy test.
Her hands shook violently.
When I came home that evening, I found her sitting on the couch, crying silently.
Fear shot through me.
“Emma?”
She looked up slowly.