But now, staring at her across the table, I still wonder. Camille leaned in, ever the instigator with her knowing smirk. She looked at Élodie, who was calmly nibbling grapes, entirely unaware of the grenade she was about to toss into the middle of dinner.
“Alors, ma chérie, raconte-nous ! Tu as passé une belle journée hier avec ta maman ?” (“So, sweetie, tell us! Did you have a nice day yesterday with Mommy?”)
Élodie beamed, mouth full of fruit.
“Oui ! On a mangé une glace, puis elle a retrouvé un monsieur, et on est allés dans un magasin avec plein de bagues.” (“Yes! We had ice cream, then she met a man, and we went into a store full of rings.”)
Time.
Stopped. My mother’s wine glass halted midair. Camille’s fork dropped to her plate with a soft clink.
I didn’t breathe. Camille leaned closer, voice tightening. “Un monsieur ?
Quel monsieur ?” (“A man? What man?”)
“Je sais pas… Il a pris la main de Maman, puis elle m’a dit de ne pas en parler à Papa.” (“I don’t know… He held Mommy’s hand, then she told me not to tell Daddy.”)
I choked — wine burning down the wrong pipe.
I coughed so hard I had to grab the edge of the table. Everyone turned to me, eyes wide, mouths open. And Hailey… she was still laughing at a joke my dad had just muttered in butchered English.
Oblivious. Or pretending to be. “Hailey,” I rasped, wiping my mouth, “did you take Élodie to a jewelry store… with another man?”
The laughter died on her lips.
“What?”
“She said he held your hand. And that you told her not to tell me.”
Her smile faltered. Just slightly.
But I saw it. Camille’s voice cut through the thick silence. “Qu’est-ce que tu fais, Hailey?” (“What are you doing, Hailey?”)
And Hailey whispered, “It’s… not what you think.”
I smiled, though it felt like my face might crack from the effort.
My throat was dry. The table was dead silent. I leaned toward Élodie, voice low, even.
“Répète ça en anglais, ma puce.” (“Repeat that in English, sweetheart.”)
She blinked up at me, eyes wide, sensing the shift in energy. Then, after a beat, she nodded solemnly and said:
“Mommy took me to get ice cream. Then she met a man with flowers, and they went into a ring store.” She paused and slapped her tiny hand over her mouth.
“Mommy said not to tell you because it was a secret. Sorry, Mom!”
Hailey blinked. Still smiling, but it was stiff now, almost waxy.
The silence wasn’t just awkward anymore. It was oppressive. Like we were all collectively waiting for a bomb to detonate.
I turned my head slowly. “Hailey… do you want to explain who this man was?”
Her eyes darted from me to Élodie, to Camille, then back to me. “What man?”
I repeated Élodie’s words — every one of them — in English this time, so there was no misunderstanding.
When I finished, Hailey’s mouth dropped open. And then she laughed. Not a chuckle.
A full, loud, ridiculous laugh that felt too sharp for the moment. “You think I’m cheating?” she gasped. “Seriously?!
That man is Julien!”
I blinked. “Julien?”
“My friend from college! You’ve met him — remember?
At our wedding? He’s gay, for God’s sake. His dad owns the jewelry store.
He’s helping me pick out an anniversary ring for you.”
Camille squinted. “And the flowers?”
“Props,” Hailey said, waving it off. “He’s dramatic.
It’s Julien!”
My mother leaned forward. “Et pourquoi lui dire de ne pas en parler à Papa, alors?” (“And why tell her not to tell Papa, then?”)
Hailey’s laugh died as quickly as it started. Her gaze fell on Élodie.
“…Because,” she muttered, “it was supposed to be a surprise.”
I stared at her, stunned. The laughter, the accusations, the weight of the past few minutes — all of it hung in the air, trembling. Hailey didn’t say anything at first.
Instead, she slowly reached into her purse, her hands just the slightest bit shaky. The world seemed to narrow down to her fingers unzipping that small compartment. Then she pulled out a small, white velvet box.
She opened it. Inside were two gold bands — simple, elegant, glowing with the last bit of sunlight flickering through the olive trees. She looked up at me, eyes shining.
“I wanted us to renew our vows for our 10th anniversary. I didn’t know how to pick the rings myself, so Julien helped. He knows your style better than I do, apparently.”
Everyone was silent.
Even Élodie, sensing something beautiful blooming from the chaos. Hailey drew in a breath, then dropped to one knee. Right there in front of my stunned family, wine glasses mid-air and mouths still slightly open, she looked up at me and smiled through the nerves.
“Would you marry me again?” she asked. My heart slammed against my chest. I couldn’t breathe, couldn’t blink.
But then I saw her — my wife, the woman who once butchered French just to talk to me. Who braved oceans for love, who was now kneeling in front of our daughter and parents, holding out a second chance. I whispered, “Yes.
A thousand times yes.”
Gasps. Applause. A sob from Camille.
My mother clutched her chest. My father raised his glass with the proudest grin in Provence. “À l’amour,” he declared, “et aux enfants qui ne savent pas garder de secrets !” (“To love, and to children who can’t keep secrets!”)
Two weeks later, we held a vow renewal in our backyard.
White lights in the trees. Roses everywhere. Élodie tossed petals with a grin that could outshine the sun.
Julien, of course, wore a tuxedo two sizes too flashy and cried harder than my mom. And me? I stood at that altar, fingers laced with Hailey’s, heart full, smiling like I did ten years ago — because somehow, even after all this time, I was still falling for her.
“Ready to do this again?” she whispered. I squeezed her hand. “Forever and always.”
Source: amomama
