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“At seventy-three, I married my dy:ing high school sweetheart because it was his final wish. The morning after his funeral, his attorney appeared at my door, looked me in the eyes, and said, “Thomas was right. You walked straight into his trap.” I never imagined I would become a bride at my age. Thomas had been my first love when we were both seventeen. Back then, I had earned a place at a college in another city, while he planned to remain in our hometown and help run his father’s business. At the bus station, he begged me not to leave. But I had worked too hard to give up my future. When I refused to stay, Thomas told me I had broken his heart. After that day, we never saw each other again. More than five decades passed. A few months ago, I returned to my hometown. The truth was, my pension was no longer enough to cover my expenses, so I accepted a nursing position at the local hospital—the same kind of work I had done before retiring. Life has a strange way of bringing people back together. One morning, I entered a patient’s room to begin his treatment. I opened the chart and froze when I saw the name written at the top. Thomas. My heart began pounding. Then I looked toward the bed. The man lying there was frail, pale, and much thinner than the boy I remembered. But the moment our eyes met, I knew it was him. Thomas recognized me too. A soft smile appeared on his face. “Hello, Nancy,” he said. From that day forward, we talked whenever I was on duty. He told me he had never married. Neither had I. At first, we spoke about old memories, school, and the hometown we had once shared. But as the days passed, our conversations grew warmer and more personal. It felt as though the fifty-six years between us were slowly disappearing. Then one afternoon, Thomas reached for my hand. “Sweetheart,” he said quietly, “I feel awful asking you this.” I sat beside him, already frightened by the seriousness in his voice. “I have loved you my entire life,” he continued. “I know I don’t have much time left, but I always dreamed of marrying you.” He looked directly into my eyes. “Will you marry me? It’s my last wish.” For a moment, I could barely breathe. Thomas had stage-four cancer. He knew he was dying. And after spending most of my life wondering what might have happened if I had stayed, I could not walk away from him a second time. So I said yes. A few days later, we were married in his hospital room. There were no flowers, no music, and no crowded reception. Only a nurse, Thomas’s attorney, and the two of us holding hands beside his bed. His eyes shone as he said his vows. Mine did too. For one brief month, I was Thomas’s wife. Then he passed away. I thought I had prepared myself for the loss, but I had not. My heart broke as though I were seventeen again, standing at that bus station and watching him disappear from my life. The day after the funeral, someone knocked on my door. It was Thomas’s lawyer. He carried a small box beneath his arm. After stepping inside, he gave me a strange smile and said, “Thomas was right. You finally walked straight into his trap.” My hands began to shake. Then he placed the box in front of me. I slowly lifted the lid. And the moment I saw what Thomas had left inside, I screamed. Full story in the first comment. ⬇️”

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A thick bundle of letters lay beneath the papers, tied carefully with a piece of twine.

There were fifty-five letters.

One for almost every year Thomas and I had been apart.

A handwritten note rested on top.

I pressed a hand to my mouth as tears ran down my face.

“I don’t understand,” I whispered.

“Read the note,” Walter said. “Thomas wanted you to learn the truth in his own words.”

Thomas explained that my Aunt Margaret had been a customer at his family’s hardware store for forty years.

Over time, she had also become his friend.

Years earlier, Thomas had accidentally discovered that Raymond was quietly taking money from Margaret’s accounts.

He had tried to warn her.

But Margaret trusted her nephew and refused to believe the accusation.

When she eventually died with almost nothing, Raymond had walked away with far more money than anyone expected.

Thomas never forgot what had happened.

Years later, he learned that I had returned to town.

He also discovered that Raymond had started calling me regularly and asking questions about my finances.

Thomas understood what Raymond was planning.

“He knew?” I whispered. “Thomas knew Raymond was trying to take advantage of me?”

Walter nodded.

“That is why Thomas arranged to be transferred to your hospital ward. He wanted to see you again, but he also wanted to protect you before it was too late.”

The wedding had not been a rushed decision made by a dying man.

Thomas had planned everything.

He knew that becoming my legal husband would give him a powerful way to protect me.

He had placed his estate inside a secure trust and appointed an attorney who would prevent Raymond—or anyone else—from gaining control of my life.

“The trap was never meant for me,” I said.

“No,” Walter replied. “It was meant for Raymond.”

I pressed Thomas’s letter against my chest.

For more than fifty years, I had avoided saying his name.

Now it was the only name I wanted to speak.

Three days later, Raymond arrived at my apartment and pounded angrily on the door.

He carried a folder filled with threats, accusations, and promises to challenge everything Thomas had arranged.

Walter happened to be sitting at my kitchen table drinking tea.

“Every document is legally valid,” Walter told him calmly. “You are welcome to challenge the trust, but you will lose.”

Raymond stared at me with fury.

“You foolish old woman.”

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