My name is Rajiv, and I am 61 years old. My first wife passed away eight years ago after a long illness. Since then I have lived alone, in silence. My children are married now and live elsewhere. Once a month they come to leave me some money, my medicines, and then they leave quickly.
I do not blame them. They have their own lives, and I understand that. But on rainy nights, lying there and listening to the drops hitting the tin roof, I feel unbearably small and alone.
Last year, while browsing Facebook, I reconnected with Meena, my first girlfriend from high school. I liked her back then. She had long flowing hair, deep black eyes, and a smile so bright it lit up the whole classroom. But when we were studying for college entrance exams, her family arranged for her to marry a South Indian man ten years older than her.
We lost touch after that. Forty years later we met again. She is a widow now—her husband died five years ago. She lives with her youngest son, but he works in another city and rarely visits.
At first we only exchanged greetings. Then we began to call each other. Then came coffee meetings. Before I knew it, I found myself riding my scooter to her house every few days, carrying a small basket of fruit, some sweets, and supplements for joint pain.
One day, half-joking, I said to her:
“What if… these two old men get married? Wouldn’t it be easier to be lonely together that way?”
I was surprised to see tears fill her eyes. I hurried to explain I was only joking, but she smiled gently and nodded.
And that is how, at age 61, I married again—my first love.
On our wedding day I wore a dark maroon sherwani. She wore a simple cream silk sari. Her hair was neatly tied back, adorned with a small pearl hairpin. Friends and neighbors came to celebrate. Everyone said, “They look like youngsters in love again.”
And truly, I felt young again. That night, after cleaning up the party, it was almost 10 p.m. I made her a glass of warm milk and went to close the front door and turn off the veranda lights.
That wedding night—something I never thought would live again in my chest—came to an end.
As I gently slipped off her blouse, I froze.
Her back, shoulders, and arms were covered in deep discoloration—old scars that crossed like a tragic map. I went cold; my heart filled with worry.
She quickly covered herself with a blanket, her eyes wide with fear. Trembling, I asked,
“Meena… what happened to you?”
She turned, her voice choked:
“Back then… he had a terrible temper. He would shout… he beat me… I never told anyone…”
I sat up close beside her, tears streaming from my eyes. My heart ached for her. All those years she had lived in silence—afraid and ashamed—without telling anyone. I took her hand and gently placed it over my heart.
“That is enough. From now on, no one will hurt you again. Nobody has the right to make you suffer… except me, but only because I love you so much.”
She sobbed—quiet, trembling sobs that echoed through the room. I held her tightly. Her back was frail, her bones slightly prominent—the small woman who had endured a lifetime of silence and suffering.
Our wedding was nothing like that of young couples. We simply lay beside each other, listening to the crickets calling in the yard, the wind moving through the trees. I stroked her hair and kissed her forehead. She touched my cheek and whispered,
“Thank you. Thank you for showing me there is still someone in this world who cares for me.”
She smiled. At 61, I finally understood: happiness is not money or the wild passions of youth. It is having a hand to hold, a shoulder to lean on, and someone to stay beside you all night just to feel the beating of your heart.
Tomorrow will come too. Who knows how many days are left for me? But one thing I know for certain: for the rest of her life, I will make up for what was taken from her. I will treasure her. I will take care of her so she will never be afraid again.
Because for me, that wedding night—after half a century of longing, missed chances, and waiting—was the greatest gift life has given me.
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