I staggered back. My mind raced. The girl I remembered, the one whose smile I carried for forty years—gone?
“She di:ed,” the woman whispered, tears streaming. “She di:ed young. Our parents buried her quietly. But everyone always said I looked like her… talked like her… I was her shadow. When you found me on Facebook, I… I couldn’t resist. You thought I was her. And for the first time in my life, someone looked at me the way they looked at Anna. I didn’t want to lose that.”
I felt the ground tilt beneath me. My “first love” was dead. The woman in front of me wasn’t her—she was a mirror, a ghost wearing Anna’s memories.
I wanted to scream, to curse, to demand why she deceived me. But looking at her, shaking and fragile, I realized she wasn’t just a liar—she was a woman who had lived her entire life in someone else’s shadow, unseen, unloved.
Tears burned my eyes. My chest ached with grief—for Anna, for the years stolen, for the cruel trick of fate.
I whispered hoarsely:
“So who are you, really?”
She lifted her face, broken.
“My name is Eleanor. And all I wanted was… to know what it feels like to be chosen. Just once.”
That night, I lay awake beside her, unable to close my eyes. My heart was torn in two—between the ghost of the girl I loved, and the lonely woman who had stolen her face.
And I realized: love in old age isn’t always a gift. Sometimes, it’s a test. A cruel one.
