On our wedding night, I thought my life was finally settling into a warm, steady happiness. We had danced, laughed, and promised forever. When we got to our suite, he took my hands gently, kissed them, and stared at me with such softness it almost made me cry.
“You look beautiful as always… **Amy**,” he whispered.
My smile froze.
My heart dropped.
My name isn’t Amy.
I pulled back just a little, enough to see the shift in his expression. Color drained from his face. His lips trembled as though he’d just realized what he’d said.
He tried to speak—stammering, apologizing, saying it was a mistake, that he was tired, that he didn’t know why he said it. But you don’t accidentally say a name with that kind of tenderness.
I didn’t confront him that night. I just lay awake, listening to his breathing, wondering who Amy was… and how long she had been living in his heart.
Over the next few weeks, the truth unraveled quietly. A forgotten message on his tablet. A letter tucked in the back of a drawer. Her name appearing again and again, like a ghost haunting our new home.
She was his first love.
His unresolved love.
His never-let-go love.
And I was the one he tried to use as a bandage.
Two months after the wedding, I filed for divorce. Not out of anger, but out of self-respect. I deserved to be someone’s first choice, not someone’s replacement for a dream that had shattered long before I arrived.
When I walked out of the courthouse, I felt lighter. Not because I’d lost a husband, but because I’d regained myself.
