When my best friend Jace, a long-haul trucker, came to stay, I cooked his favorite meal. My girlfriend Kaylee met him for the first time that night. Halfway through dinner, my mom called about a burst pipe, so I left for an hour.
When I got back, the vibe was… off. Kaylee barely spoke and went to bed early. The next day, she avoided Jace completely. Finally, after he left the house, she sat me down. “He has to go,” she said, eyes brimming with tears.
Confused, I asked why. That’s when she told me: while I was gone, Jace admitted he was in love with me. My stomach dropped. Jace and I had been close for years, and I always thought of it as friendship. But as Kaylee’s words sank in, I realized I’d been lying to myself. I couldn’t stop thinking about how I counted down to his visits, or how the room always felt brighter when he was in it. When I confronted Jace, he admitted it. “I didn’t mean to say it,” he confessed, “but I don’t regret it.”
Kaylee saw the truth before I did. With quiet grace, she packed her things and told me, “You two fit. I think you’ll be happy together.” Three years later, Jace and I sent her an invitation to our wedding. We didn’t expect her to come—but she did. Standing there in a blue dress, she smiled and whispered, “I told you you’d be happy together.” She was right.