At 60, I remarried my first love. But on our wedding night, as I gently undressed her, I froze—shocked—and a sudden wave of sadness washed over me when I saw…

When I fully opened his shirt, I saw him.

A long scar crossed his chest.

And another smaller one near the shoulder.

I looked up.

-What happened?

Manuel smiled gently.

—A heart attack three years ago… and a complicated surgery.

I felt a lump in my throat.

—You never told me.

—I didn’t mean to worry you.

I remained silent, observing those marks.

Manuel’s body was not the same as I remembered from our youth.

But mine wasn’t either.

My hands also had age spots.

My skin was no longer firm.

Our bodies told stories.

Life stories.

Of losses.

From years that never returned.

And then I understood why I had felt that pang of sadness.

It wasn’t fear.

It was the weight of everything we had lost.

Forty years.

Forty years we could have spent together.

I approached him.

I gently touched the scar.

—I thought it was too late to love again —Manuel said.

I shook my head.

—It’s not too late.

I looked him in the eyes.

—We just arrived… wiser.

Manuel took my hand.

We lay down next to each other.

There was no rush.

There were no absurd expectations.

Just two people who had found their way back after a lifetime.

And at that moment I understood something very simple.

True love doesn’t always come when we’re young.

Sometimes it comes when we have lived long enough to understand what it truly means not to be alone.

Manuel kissed my forehead softly.

Not with the urgency of youth.

Not with the desperation of someone trying to prove anything.

But with the tenderness of a man who had already lost too much in life and had finally found something worth protecting again.

That night, we fell asleep holding hands.

And for the first time in many years…

I didn’t feel alone.

But happiness at our age comes with a cruel shadow.

Because when life finally gives you peace, fear quietly enters through the back door.

Three weeks after the wedding, I woke up in the middle of the night and noticed Manuel wasn’t beside me.

The house was dark.

Silent.

I slowly walked toward the kitchen.

And there he was.

Sitting alone at the table.

One hand pressed against his chest.

Sweating.

Breathing heavily.

My heart nearly stopped.

—Manuel?!

He quickly straightened up.

—I’m fine… it’s nothing.

But I could see the pain in his face.

At the hospital, the doctor explained everything calmly.

His heart was weak.

The surgery had saved his life years ago, but the damage remained.

Stress was dangerous.

Strong emotions too.

He needed rest.

Medication.

Care.

On the drive home, neither of us spoke much.

The silence between us wasn’t uncomfortable.

It was frightened.

That night, Manuel sat on the edge of the bed without looking at me.

—I almost didn’t marry you.

I frowned.

—Why?

He swallowed hard.

—Because I knew this could happen.

I sat beside him quietly.

—I didn’t want you to become a nurse for an old sick man.

His voice cracked slightly.

—I already stole forty years from us. I didn’t want to steal the little time you had left too.

The sadness in his eyes hurt me more than anything.

Because I finally understood something.

Manuel wasn’t afraid of dying.

He was afraid of becoming a burden.

I took his face gently between my hands.

—Listen to me carefully.

He looked at me.

—I married you because I love you. Not because I expected perfect health. Not because I wanted some fairy tale.

Tears filled his eyes.

—I spent years taking care of my late husband while cancer slowly consumed him. Do you know what hurt the most?

He stayed silent.

—Not the illness. The loneliness. Watching someone feel guilty for needing love.

Manuel lowered his head.

I lifted his chin again.

—So don’t you dare apologize to me for being human.

That night, he cried.

For the first time since I had known him.

Not loudly.