At first, I thought I was hallucinating. But as I looked closer, I knew it was her. The way she stood, the way she tilted her head, it was all so familiar. My heart skipped a beat as I realized that the woman I had been searching for all these years was standing right in front of me.
I approached her cautiously, not wanting to startle her. “Lisa?” I called out her name, my voice shaking with emotion. She turned around, and our eyes met for the first time in fifteen years. The shock and surprise on her face were palpable.
We stood there for a moment, frozen in time. Then, she spoke, her voice barely above a whisper. “Bryan?” she said, her eyes welling up with tears. I couldn’t believe it. After all these years, she was standing in front of me, alive and well.
We walked out of the supermarket, into the parking lot, where she began to explain her disappearance. She told me that she had been feeling overwhelmed and trapped, that she didn’t know how to be a mother or a wife. She said that she had run away to Europe, where she had started a new life, free from the responsibilities and expectations that had suffocated her.