“Why Did You Bring Your Kids Here?” The Single Mom Whispered On Their Blind Date — And The Ceo Just Smiled.

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“Why Did You Bring Your Kids Here?”—the poor widow whispered on a blind date. The CEO smiled…

The restaurant glowed with soft lights strung along exposed brick walls, candles flickering on every table like tiny, dancing stars. It was the kind of place that spoke of special occasions and first impressions—anniversaries, proposals, birthday dinners where people pretended everything was perfect even when it wasn’t.

Amanda Fletcher stood near the entrance, smoothing down her light blue sweater for the third time, feeling completely out of place. Her reflection in the glass door looked like someone who’d wandered into the wrong life. Her hair had frizzed a little from the cold January air, her mascara smudged at the corner from where she’d rubbed her eyes earlier, and there was a faint stain of peanut butter on the cuff of her sleeve she hadn’t noticed until the Uber was already halfway here.

At 34, she hadn’t been on a date in 4 years. Not since before her husband, Michael, died in the car accident that had turned her world upside down on a rainy Thursday she still dreamed about. She’d built her life since then around survival: wake up, get the twins ready, drop them at daycare or kindergarten, commute to work, stare at spreadsheets, come home, cook something from the cheapest grocery aisle, collapse into bed.

She’d been managing—barely—working as a bookkeeper at a small accounting firm while raising their twin daughters alone in a modest two-bedroom apartment with squeaky floors and a faucet that never stopped dripping. She knew every coupon app, every discount day, every way to stretch a dollar until it screamed. Dating was not on the list.

Her friend Rachel had been the one to suggest the blind date. Suggest was a polite word. Nag, push, wear down—those were closer.

“You’re not dead, Amanda,” Rachel had said one night as they cleaned up after a pot of boxed mac and cheese the girls hadn’t finished. “He would not want you to be alone forever.”

Amanda had bristled at that. “You didn’t know Michael the way I did.”

Rachel had softened.

“I know he loved you. And I know he’d hate the idea of you punishing yourself for the rest of your life. You’re allowed to want something besides work and parent-teacher conferences.”

She’d pushed the blond hair out of her face and leaned on the counter.

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