Rebecca Sloan was forty years old when she agreed to marry a man who walked with a damaged leg and a quiet heart. There was no whirlwind romance and no feverish passion in the decision. There was only the gentle exhaustion of a woman who had chased love for too long and found nothing but broken promises waiting at the end of each road.
For years, Rebecca had watched her friends marry, divorce, marry again, and speak of love as if it were a game of chance. She had tried it too, trusting charming smiles and poetic words, only to be discarded when novelty faded. Each disappointment left a thinner layer of hope inside her, until even hope grew tired.
Her mother often sat beside her in the small kitchen of their rented home in Maple Glen, a quiet town tucked between rolling hills and fields of wild grass. On evenings when loneliness pressed hardest, her mother would sigh and say gently, “Maybe you should stop looking for fireworks, my dear. The man next door, the one who repairs radios and computers, he has a good heart. He may limp, but he stands firm where it matters.”
His name was Daniel Grayson. He lived two houses away in a weathered cedar cottage with his aging father. When he was seventeen, a car accident crushed his right leg and left him walking with a permanent limp. He fixed electronics for half the town and never charged the elderly too much. He spoke little, smiled often, and never once looked at Rebecca with anything but quiet respect.
Rumors drifted through Maple Glen that Daniel had loved her for years but never dared to say so. Rebecca had noticed his glances, his small gestures, the way he always fixed her appliances without delay. Still, she had never considered him seriously, until the day she realized that waiting for perfection had left her alone at forty.
One rainy afternoon, wind rattling the windows and fallen leaves swirling across the porch, Daniel stood before her holding a single white lily.
“I know I am not the man you once dreamed of,” he said, his voice steady though his hands trembled slightly. “But if you would let me walk beside you, even slowly, I promise you will never walk alone again.”
Rebecca listened to the rain and felt the weight of her years pressing against her chest. She thought of empty holidays, quiet dinners, and phone calls that never came. She nodded.
“Yes,” she whispered. “Let us try.”