He broke off the engagement before the wedding day, then suddenly appeared 3 years later and asked me for a meal. What he left on the dining table left my whole family speechless, covering their faces and crying.

“I only asked for a meal, then I left,” he whispered like a stranger.

The day he apologized and disappeared, everyone called him a bad guy. I sat down on the floor, my hands shaking with anger. The wedding ceremony at the church had been canceled 3 days before. My mother was so ashamed that she didn’t dare to step out of the gate, and my father declared that if he saw me again, he would “beat me to death.”

I also hated him. Hated him for not giving me an explanation, not saying a proper goodbye—only leaving a handwritten note: “I’m sorry, but I can’t marry you.” After 4 years of being in love, all I got was silence and tears. He disappeared without a trace. I moved out, changed jobs, and even changed my phone number.

And yet, three years later, he came back. One October afternoon in Manila, the wind was cold and the drizzle was drizzling in front of the condo. The doorbell rang, and I opened it to see a heartbreakingly familiar face.

“I just asked for a meal, and then I left,” he repeated. I didn’t nod or shake my head—I just leaned over to let him in. Three years had molded me into a calm woman, no longer a child to cry or blame. I cooked rice. A simple meal like nothing we had ever had before—a pot of sinigang-style fish soup that I had learned from YouTube, some braised meat similar to adobo, a bowl of hot rice.

My mother came in and was stunned to see him. But seeing me calm, she held back her feelings. During the meal, no one mentioned the past. He ate very little, and I quietly ate to fulfill my role as host.

After finishing the meal, he took out a stack of documents from his pocket and placed them on the table:

“This condo unit in Quezon City is now under your name. Here are the transfer documents—Condominium Certificate of Title and the transfer contract. I won’t take anything back.”

My mother was about to react when he continued:

“Actually, after the wedding was called off, I didn’t disappear. I just backed out. The apartment you’re renting—I bought it back from the previous owner and put someone else in my name so you wouldn’t be suspicious. Every month you transfer the rent, I keep it intact and don’t touch it. Now, I’m returning you both the passbook and the house.”

I was stunned. My parents didn’t say anything either. He stood up and bowed very low: “I’m sorry, Tita, Tito. That year, I found out I had a genetic disease—something that could affect my children. I panicked and didn’t know what to do, so I called off the wedding. I’m so sorry to everyone. I hurt… Trina.”

I clenched my fists. Every word he said was like a needle piercing my heart. It turned out that for three years, I had hated someone who had secretly loved me in a way I never expected.

He left right after that. My mother was silent for a long time before saying, “Maybe I was wrong to only look at things. Some people choose to love in a way that others don’t understand.”

I still live in that condo. Every morning, I sweep the balcony, water the coconut pots overlooking the small alley of the barangay. I am grateful to him, and understand more: there is love that, even if not by my side, still exists silently like the street light outside the alley—not bright, but always there to keep me from getting lost.

That night, I texted him after three unanswered calls. I wondered again: If he had made it clear that day, would our fate—in the middle of this crowded Manila—have been different?