At our engagement dinner, Ben stood up for a toast. I expected something sweet. Instead, he pulled out a framed photo of his late wife, Natalie, and a lace veil she wore at their wedding. “I want you to wear this on our big day,” he said. My heart sank.
I sat frozen while everyone watched. That veil wasn’t a gift—it was a ghost. I had spent two years living in Natalie’s shadow, quietly accepting her memory in every corner of our home. But this was different. This was my moment, and he made it hers.
Later, I told him the truth: I couldn’t marry someone who loved a memory more than he saw me. “I knew about your past,” I said, “but I thought I was your future.” I left him, returned the dress, and stayed in a cabin until I could finally breathe again—as just me, not a replacement.
Six months later, I live in a new place filled only with my things. I’m not dating, not rushing. I’m relearning how to be Olivia—whole, messy, enough. And if someone loves me next, they’ll love all of me. Not who I remind them of. Just me.