The ceremony had just ended, and the entire family on both sides showered us with blessings. I—Alejandro—was still feeling intoxicated by the tequila and the happiness of my wedding. The woman I had just married, Marisol, was a sweet and modest young woman; everyone said I was lucky to have found her.
Our wedding night was supposed to be the most sacred and sweet moment of our lives. However, Marisol was behaving strangely. From the moment we entered the room, she sat silently on the edge of the bed, her hands clasped and trembling. I thought it might be due to shyness, so I tried to joke gently to reassure her. But the closer I got, the more she avoided me, flatly refusing to let me near her.
Time passed, and my patience began to wear thin. A feeling of discomfort, even anger, crept into me. A nagging question echoed in my mind:
“Is Marisol hiding something from me?”
The night wore on, and only the dim yellowish light of the lamp remained in the room. She was still huddled under the blankets, shivering. I approached, placed my hand on her shoulder, and asked gently,
“What’s wrong? We’re married now. Don’t you trust me?”
Marisol pressed her lips together, her eyes brimming with tears. She didn’t say a word, just pulled the blanket closer around her. Her silence made my heart pound even more.
In a moment of anger mixed with curiosity, I decided to lift the blanket. And the moment I did… what appeared before my eyes chilled my blood and broke my heart.
On Marisol’s body were old scars, long and short, etched on her back, arms, and legs. I remained motionless, my heart clenched as if someone were strangling it. I looked up at my wife’s face: her eyes were closed, and tears were rolling down her cheeks, as if she were awaiting an imminent judgment.
I immediately dropped the blanket and knelt down in front of her, my voice breaking:
“Marisol… forgive me! I was wrong… Please forgive me!”
She opened her eyes in surprise. Perhaps she hadn’t expected that reaction. With trembling hands, I took hers and whispered,
“What do these scars mean? What happened to you? Why didn’t you ever tell me?”
After a long silence, Marisol began to recount her story through sobs. Before meeting me, she had a childhood marked by pain. Her parents died when she was a child, and she was sent to live with distant relatives. But instead of receiving love, she was treated like a burden, forced to work tirelessly, and cruelly abused. Every scar on her body was a mark of that dark past.
Growing up, Marisol tried to escape that nightmare and lead a normal life. However, the memories remained etched deep in her heart, filling her with fear, shame, and doubt that anyone could truly love her. When she agreed to marry me, she was happy, but also terrified. And that wedding night, the ghosts of her past returned, preventing her from giving in.
Listening to her, I hugged her with all my strength. My tears fell on her shoulder. I whispered in her ear,
“That past doesn’t define who you are today. To me, you are the most valuable woman in the world. Your scars don’t take away your beauty; on the contrary, they make me love and respect you even more.”
Marisol burst into tears in my arms, clinging to my shirt as if she could finally let go of the weight she’d carried for so long. That wedding night, instead of being a night of pleasure like other marriages, became a night of understanding and deep unity.
Since then, I learned to value Marisol even more. I understood that true love doesn’t mean perfection, but rather accepting and protecting the wounds of others. I didn’t care about her past; all I wanted was to build a future with her where those scars would become just a distant memory.
Years later, when I remembered that night, Marisol still blushed. I just smiled, because I understood that the moment I lifted the blanket not only revealed a hidden truth to me, but also taught me what true love means.
Their wedding night—the beginning of a life together—was marked not by flowers or wine, but by shared tears and an eternal promise: no matter how painful the past, the future would always find us holding hands until the end of our days.
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