At 65, a man remarried his friend’s young daughter: but on the first wedding night, while taking off her wedding dress, he saw something terrible .
He was sixty-five. He has long gotten used to the idea that old age will pass alone: five years ago his wife passed away, and since then every night he has returned to an empty house.
Everything changed one night when he came to visit his old friend. There, he saw his friend’s young, unmarried daughter and immediately fell in love.
She was much younger than him, but something quickly came between them that couldn’t be explained. They talked for hours, finding warmth and understanding in each other, which they both needed so much. Soon the feelings became obvious: he fell in love with her with all his heart, and she fell in love with him.
However, the girl’s father was against the union. “You’re putting your family to shame! » – he screamed while locking his daughter at home. The girl wrote letters, and the man waited for her at the gate, hoping to see at least a glimpse. They were separated, they were forbidden to meet, but the love did not disappear.
They fought for the right to be together and, despite the resistance, achieved their goal: the wedding took place after all.
That day was like a celebration of a new life. The man felt young, and his bride was radiant with happiness. It seemed that only joy was waiting for them. But…
On the first wedding night, when he carefully unzipped the buttons on her wedding dress, he saw something terrible.

When his trembling fingers gently unbuttoned the back of her wedding dress, he wasn’t thinking of anything but love and tenderness. He wanted the moment to be perfect—slow, respectful, meaningful.
But when the silk slipped from her shoulders, he froze.
Across her back and down her arms… were long, deep scars. Some old and faded, others newer, still pink and raw. There were marks no clothing could hide entirely—marks no heart could see without breaking.
For a few seconds, he couldn’t breathe.
She didn’t turn around. She didn’t speak. She just stood there, shoulders slightly shaking, as if she’d been waiting for this reaction her whole life.
He whispered, almost choking on his own voice:
“Who… who did this to you?”
Her hands clutched the front of the dress as if it were armor. Tears began to fall silently.
“It was my father,” she said in a faint, steady tone. “The man you once called friend. The man who tried to stop our wedding.”
The world around him went silent.
She went on, voice trembling:
“When I refused to marry the man he chose… he locked me up. I tried to run… twice. The last time… he said if I dared to love you again, he’d rather destroy me than let me leave.”
She didn’t turn to face him, as if afraid he might step back in disgust.
But he didn’t move away.
Instead, he wrapped his arms around her from behind—carefully, as if she were glass—and rested his forehead against her shoulder.
Softly, he said:
“You should never have carried this alone.”
She finally covered his hands with hers, and for the first time since the scars were made, she didn’t try to hide them.
That night, there was no passion—only tears, trembling, and the fragile beginning of healing.
On the wedding night, he did not lose love…
He discovered the price she had paid for it.