I was showing my daughter some old college photos when we came across one of me and Nico, an ex from before I met her dad. I thought I’d thrown that picture away, but there it was. My daughter pointed at it and said, “I know him. This is the guy who gave me the bracelet at the fair.” My stomach dropped. I hadn’t seen Nico in nearly seven years, not since I left our life in Charleston for Atlanta. But my daughter remembered him from a random encounter at a tiny fair months ago—an encounter that felt too coincidental to ignore.
That night, I called my sister Diah, and when I told her what had happened, she suggested Nico might not have just “run into” my daughter, but been looking for me. I couldn’t stop thinking about it. My daughter’s description of the bracelet, which was far too well-made to be a random giveaway, led me to remember Nico used to make bracelets like that when we were together. It felt like a sign. I tried searching for him online but found nothing—until I remembered his mom’s bakery in Charleston. After driving five hours back to the city I had left behind, I went there, hoping for answers.
The woman behind the counter at Jasmine & Rye recognized me immediately and told me Nico still worked in town, helping with art workshops. She scribbled down the address of a warehouse where he was working on a mural, and I found him there, seven years older but unmistakably him. The moment our eyes met, it was like no time had passed. He admitted he’d seen my daughter at the fair and that the bracelet had been something he’d made a year ago but kept in his wallet until he saw her. It all felt so surreal, like a piece of our past had come back to give us closure.
Over the next few months, we reconnected, spending time together in small but meaningful ways—parks, museums, just real moments. One night when my daughter got sick, I called Nico without thinking. He was there in minutes, staying with us all night. That night, as we sat together, I realized I might have made a mistake leaving him. He didn’t stop loving us; he just hadn’t stopped living his life either. Over time, we rebuilt what we once had—slowly, carefully. It wasn’t about promises but about being present, and eventually, we started making bracelets together, opening an Etsy shop with my daughter. Some things, I realized, don’t really end. They just pause, waiting for the right moment to begin again.