She thinks she’s 10. Can’t remember much. But for some reason… she remembers Dan.
Her childhood friend. No one else.”
I couldn’t speak. Dan looked like a man caught in the rain with no umbrella.
“I didn’t want to upset you,” he said. “Not after everything with her before. I thought you’d take it the wrong way.”
I stared at him, then at Erika, who smiled at him like he was her whole world.
“You should’ve told me,” I whispered. “I know,” he said. “I’m sorry.”
But my mind was still tangled with one thing.
“The flowers?” I asked. “Why were they sometimes unwrapped? And bruised?”
Erika’s mom smiled gently.
“Those are from my garden. I cut them for Dan to bring to you. He insists on bringing you something, even though he’s here helping us.”
Dan rubbed the back of his neck.
“I guess I’m not great with flower transport,” he joked weakly. I let out a breath. My shoulders sagged, and my lungs finally opened up.
But there was one more thing. “The note,” I pressed again. “That was your handwriting, wasn’t it?”
The woman’s hand flew to her mouth.
“Oh no! I left that for Dan, just a reminder to come Friday. I must’ve dropped it in the wrapping.
I’m so sorry.”
Dan shook his head. “I didn’t even see it. I just grabbed the bouquet and ran late, like always.”
For a second, no one spoke.
And then I laughed. A soft, wet, trembling laugh. Because for a whole week, I’d imagined affairs.
Secrets. Another woman. But the only secret he was keeping… was kindness.
I walked over and touched Erika’s hand. She blinked at me. Then smiled like I was someone she liked, even if she didn’t know why.
“You’re pretty,” she whispered. My throat tightened. “You’re sweet.”
Dan stepped beside me.
“I wanted to protect you, Ada,” he said. “But I should’ve trusted you.”
“Yeah,” I whispered. “You should’ve.”
But I wasn’t mad anymore.
How could I be? Now, almost every other day, Dan still visits Erika. Sometimes I go with him.
I bring cookies. Flowers, sometimes. And Erika, the girl I once thought of as the threat, beams when she sees us.
Last week, she asked if I wanted to be her best friend. I said yes. Because how could I not?
When someone’s mind is stuck in a time they barely understand, the only familiar face becomes their entire world. And mine, the man I thought might’ve been betraying me, turned out to be that kind of face for someone else. He didn’t walk away.
He didn’t ghost her. He chose to be there quietly… without expecting anything in return.
Love isn’t always loud. Sometimes it’s just… tulips on a Friday and the way someone reads Charlotte’s Web to a woman who forgot her own name. So yeah, I nearly blew up my marriage over a note in a flower bouquet, and I stalked my own husband.
And I’ll never look at flowers the same way again. Sometimes, you follow the wrong clues to find the right truth. And if you’ve made it this far, let me ask you something: Have you ever jumped to the wrong conclusion about someone you love?







