The first months after our wedding were like stepping into spring after a long, harsh winter. Every morning, I brewed tea while she watered the jasmine plants outside the porch. Sometimes neighbors would smile and whisper, “Look at them — lovebirds at sixty.” I didn’t mind. In fact, I felt proud.
But life, as always, was not without storms.

One evening, my eldest son came over unannounced. He stood stiffly in the doorway, glaring at Pooja as though she were an intruder.
“Father,” he said coldly, “you’re too old for this. People are laughing. You should be thinking about your grandchildren, not chasing after romance.”
The words stabbed me. For a moment, silence filled the room. Pooja lowered her head, her hands trembling in her lap. I saw the shadow of her old fears flicker across her face.
I straightened my back. “Son, I lived half a lifetime in loneliness. I buried your mother, raised you all, and spent years eating dinner by myself. Now, finally, I’ve found someone who makes me smile again. If that is shameful, then let the world laugh.”
My son clenched his jaw, then stormed out. That night, Pooja whispered through tears, “Maybe I shouldn’t have come back into your life. I don’t want to break your family apart.”
I turned to her and said firmly: “No. For decades you lived in silence because you thought your pain didn’t matter. But to me, you matter more than anything. Let them say what they want. This house belongs to us.”
From then on, I shielded her from every unkind look, every whispered word. Some of my children grew distant, but gradually, they saw how happy I was. They saw how she cared for me — bringing me my medicine, massaging my aching knees, singing softly as she cooked. Slowly, resistance gave way to acceptance.
One day, my youngest granddaughter climbed into Pooja’s lap and said, “Grandma, your hair smells nice.” My heart swelled. In that moment, I knew the wall had finally begun to crumble.
The years rolled on. My hands grew weaker, my steps slower. But Pooja was always there, steady as the monsoon rains, gentle as the morning light.
One rainy night — the kind that once made me feel so small and alone — I sat with her on the porch, our hands clasped. Lightning flickered across the sky, and she rested her head on my shoulder.
I whispered, “Do you regret it? Choosing me, so late in life?”
She shook her head, her eyes shimmering. “No. You gave me back the years I thought I had lost. You showed me that love doesn’t age. It only grows braver.”
I closed my eyes, memorizing the weight of her hand, the rhythm of her breath. I knew time would one day separate us again. But for now — for this fleeting eternity — I had everything I had ever prayed for.
Because true love doesn’t ask for youth, wealth, or crowns. It asks only for courage. And in the autumn of our lives, Pooja and I finally found the spring we had been denied.