Adam and I met twelve years ago at a charity auction benefiting children with cancer. I was volunteering, helping organize the silent auction items, when he outbid everyone else for a watercolor of the Boston skyline at sunset—vibrant oranges and purples bleeding into the harbor. After winning, he walked straight over to me and handed it over.
“I noticed you looking at this all night,” he said with a smile that made his blue eyes crinkle at the corners. “I think it belongs with you.”
That was Adam—thoughtful, observant, generous to a fault. I fell hard and fast.
We went on our first date the next evening, and it felt like we had known each other our entire lives. He was a corporate attorney—brilliant but humble—the kind of man who remembered the names of wait staff and asked genuine questions about their lives. Eight months after we met, he proposed on the harbor with the actual skyline mirroring the painting that brought us together.
We bought our Victorian home in Beacon Hill shortly after our first anniversary. It was a stretch financially at $800,000, but Adam had just made partner at his firm, and I was building a solid reputation as an interior designer. The house needed work, but it had good bones, high ceilings, and a small garden out back where I envisioned future children playing.
Those children never came, not for lack of trying. For years, we charted and planned and hoped. Then came the doctors, the tests, the procedures—four rounds of IVF that drained our savings and our spirits.
I still remember the last failed attempt and the quiet drive home from the clinic, Adam reaching across the console to hold my hand, neither of us speaking because we both knew that was the end of that road. “We can still have a beautiful life,” Adam said that night as we sat on our porch swing. “You and me.
That is enough.”
And he meant it. We slowly rebuilt our dreams. We traveled.
We poured ourselves into our careers. We renovated the house room by room until it was the showcase home I had always imagined. Adam supported my business when I decided to launch my own interior design firm.
Our life was full, if different, than what we had first planned. My younger sister, Cassandra, was always in the periphery of our happiness. Four years younger than me, at 30, she had always been the wild child of the family.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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