I spent a week in love with a young stranger and was sure it was just an ordinary holiday romance, but when I returned home, a real surprise was waiting for me 🫣☹️
My sister and I went to the sea at the beginning of September. The season was already coming to an end, there were fewer people on the beach, and everything felt calm and a little lazy. On the very first evening, we went to a small café by the water. I sat there, watching the sunset, and felt a quiet finally settling inside me.
He approached me himself. Asked if the chair was free. Smiled as if we had known each other for a long time. He was younger than me, and I understood that right away. But there was no mockery or shallow interest in his eyes. He looked at me seriously, attentively, as if I were the most important woman in that place.
We started talking. First about the sea, then about life. I immediately told him my age. Told him I was married and wasn’t going to make any promises. He nodded calmly and said he didn’t need anything except those days. No future, no plans, no obligations.
With him, I felt different. Beside him, I wasn’t a tired wife used to enduring and staying silent. I was a woman. Alive, beautiful, desired. He held my hand as if he was afraid to let it go. He looked at me as if I were the youngest person on that beach.
We walked along the shore at night, swam in the warm water, laughed for no reason. Sometimes we just sat in silence, looking at the sea. Time with him passed so quickly that I didn’t notice when the day of departure arrived.
We didn’t exchange promises. We didn’t make plans. I was sure everything would stay there by the sea. A short romance that would be forgotten as soon as I returned to my usual life. We didn’t even exchange contact details or personal information.
The road back was long. In my mind, I was already erasing him from my memory, convincing myself that it was the right thing to do.
But at home, the most terrible “surprise” was waiting for me 😲🫣 Continued in the first comment 👇👇
When I opened the apartment door, there were unfamiliar men’s sneakers in the hallway. Expensive ones, neatly placed by the wall.
From the kitchen, I heard my daughter’s voice:
— Mom, you’re back? I want you to meet someone.
I walked into the room and saw him. The guy from the beach.
He was standing next to my daughter.
— This is my fiancé, we’re getting married soon. Are you happy? — my daughter said with a bright smile.
And in that moment, I realized that holiday romances sometimes come home sooner than you manage to forget them.
And now I don’t know what to do — tell my daughter the truth and destroy her happiness along with my family, or stay silent and live with this lie every day, pretending that nothing ever happened.