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No More Second Chances

Chapter 1 

Word Count: 1015    |    Released on: 25/06/2025

Chavez, the woman I' d loved for sixty

they t

as standing at the altar, my hands sweating inside my best suit, waiting. My best friend, Andrew Scott, stood beside

he chapel doors, her face a mess of tears.

into her husband' s arms. "There's b

make sense. An accident? Maria w

er father said, his voic

e in this town, just like we did before. We had lived until we were old and gray, and when we died in our sleep, holding hands, I thought it w

ift felt li

lences from neighbors who looked at me with pity. I was the tragic groom, the man who lost his bride on his wedding day. I kept re

a lifetime of devotion just end li

in my garage, staring at the engine of a

s a hand on the Fowler farm, and he looked

t sa

rning, dropping something off for

" The word ta

ng off Sylvia t

y, and she' d died in a suspicious car accident not long after. Wesley was the

fast," I said,

re talking... it was weird. And Sylvia... she didn't

up at Andrew, a cold dread creep

," I said, wiping the

you should ju

ounding a frantic rhythm against my ribs. The lawn was full of people. Laughter

his arm wrapped around a woman in a bright yellow dress. Her b

and my breath cau

as M

d as she took her last breath

her ear. She looked radiant, happy, and very much alive. The grief tha

e crowd, my eyes lo

e out as a c

flicker of recognition, of shock, in h

ne, replaced by a

oice smooth and unfamiliar.

s Matthew Roberts," he said, his tone dripping with fake sym

d expression. "Oh, you poor thing. I'm so sor

eople around us were starting to whisper, their pity turning to suspicion.

my voice shaking. "You'r

eding to touch her, t

ease, stop," she cried, her voice trembling.

poor, grieving fiancé had lost his mind. He was harass

ard the lady," he said, his voice hard. "Get ou

me. Humiliation burned my cheeks. I looked from M

. And I had walk

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No More Second Chances
No More Second Chances
“The day I was finally supposed to marry Maria, the woman I' d loved for sixty years across two lifetimes, she died. Or so they told me. I stood at the altar, waiting, while the Texas sun beat down on the small chapel. Then her mother stumbled through the doors, face a mess of tears. "Matthew," she wailed, "There's been an accident. A terrible accident." "She's gone," her father choked out. My world tilted. How could she be gone? We'd loved until we were old and gray in our past life, then woke up young again, a gift. Now, it felt like a curse. A week after the funeral, my best friend Andrew told me someone saw Maria's twin celebrating. "She didn't look like Sylvia," he murmured. "She looked exactly like Maria." My hands stopped. Cold dread crept up my spine. I drove to the Chavez house, heart pounding. It was a party. An engagement party. And there, draped over my rival Wesley Fowler, was her. Maria. My Maria. The woman I had buried. She was laughing, looking radiant, vibrant, and very much alive. "Maria?" I choked out. She saw me, a flicker of shock in her eyes, then it vanished. "Do I know you?" she asked, her voice smooth, unfamiliar. "I'm Sylvia." The lie was so blatant, so shameless, it knocked the wind out of me. The crowd whispered, pity turning to suspicion. "You're lying," I whispered, reaching for her. "You're Maria." She flinched. "You're scaring me!" she cried, hiding behind Wesley. "Make him leave!" The whole town stared. I was the deranged, grieving fiancé. Wesley smirked. This was a setup. I had walked right into it. That night, Wesley came to my house. He told me Maria remembered our last life, too. Remembered the poverty. She chose him for his money. "And there's something else you should know," he added, his smile turning cruel. "The baby. Your first kid, in the last life. He wasn't yours, Matt. He was mine." My world shattered. Sixty years of love, history, our son – all a lie. The foundation of my entire existence collapsed. How could she do this? How could she choose this life, this man, and lie about everything, including our child? It was an unbearable betrayal. I was nothing. But in my despair, I found my grandfather' s Medal of Honor. With it, a letter: "If you ever find yourself lost, son, find General Duncan. He'll know what to do." I looked at the world that had betrayed me. I wasn' t going to rot here. I drove north, seeking a new beginning, a new path fueled by honor, not revenge. My old life was dead. It was time to build a new one.”
1 Introduction2 Chapter 13 Chapter 24 Chapter 35 Chapter 46 Chapter 57 Chapter 68 Chapter 79 Chapter 810 Chapter 911 Chapter 10