Before Emma came back into his life⌠Adam had already lived through love, loss, and the quiet realization that moving on isnât always as simple as it seems.
After Emma and I broke up in December of â93, I didnât think I would ever love another girl.
Emma was one of a kind. Smart, funny, beautiful⌠and she liked me for me. That kind of thing sticks with you.
For a while, I didnât even try. But eventually, life nudges you forward whether youâre ready or not. I started dating again, though it never felt easy. I kept comparing everyone to her, and no one really stood a chance.
My buddy Ryan used to tell me to just keep going on datesâthat eventually, Iâd find someone.
He wasnât wrong.
I did find someone. Actually⌠I found two.
The first was Alisha. That relationship didnât end well. It taught me a lot about trust, and about paying attention to the things you donât want to see. Letâs just say⌠it left its mark.
And then there was Dara.
Dara was different.
In some ways, she reminded me of Emmaâblonde hair, blue eyes, that same kind of easy smile that could pull you in without trying. She was driven, and she knew exactly what she wanted out of life.
We met in 2005. I was thirty-two. She was twenty-five.
At the time, I didnât think much about the age difference. It didnât feel like it mattered. We got along, we made each other laugh, and for the first time in a long time, things felt⌠steady.
Comfortable.
Like maybe this was what moving on was supposed to feel like.
I really thought I might marry her.
We talked about it. Not in a rushed way, but in that quiet, natural way where it just seems like the next step.
But somewhere along the way, I realized we werenât in the same place.
I had already built the life I wanted. I was ready to settle into it, to share it with someone.
Dara was just getting started.
She had goals she hadnât reached yet, dreams she still needed to chaseâand I respected that. I really did.
But respect doesnât always make things line up.
And in the end⌠it wasnât about something going wrong.
It was about something never fully clicking into place.
Maybe I shouldâve known from the very beginning.
I remember the day I met Dara.
She was working part-time at a store in the local mall, and I was on my usual UPS route, dropping off packages like I had done a hundred times before.
Nothing about that day shouldâve stood out.
But it did.
I walked into the store and saw her right away. She was behind the counter, looking a little unsure of herself, like she was still figuring things out.
Later, Iâd find out it was her first day.
She looked up at me and smiled.
âHi.â
There was something about the way she said itâsimple, but genuine.
âHey,â I said, setting the box down on the counter. âIâve got a delivery. Do you have anything going out today?â
She hesitated for a second, then let out a small laugh. âIâm not sure, actually. Itâs my first day.â
Before I could respond, Brooklynâmy cousinâcame walking out from the back.
âHey, Adam,â she said, like she had been expecting me. She probably saw me on the camera. âLooks like youâve met our newest employee. This is Dara.â
Dara smiled again, a little more confidently this time. âHi.â
I smiled back, probably more than I needed to.
Brooklyn shook her head slightly and turned back toward the stockroom. âNo outgoing packages today,â she called over her shoulder. âBut weâll have some tomorrow.â
Dara nodded. âSo⌠I guess youâll be back?â
âYeah,â I said. âIâm on this route all week.â
âGood,â she said, almost without thinking. Then she caught herself and smiled. âI mean⌠weâll probably have something ready by then.â
I laughed. âIâll hold you to that.â
I finished up, gave Brooklyn a quick wave, and headed back out into the mall.
It shouldâve ended there. Just another stop on my route.
But as I stepped away, I glanced back.
Dara was still standing behind the counter⌠watching me.
Brooklyn was saying something to her, probably explaining how things worked, but Daraâs attention wasnât fully on her.
And I remember thinkingâ
that wasnât going to be the last time I walked into that store.
I never forgot about Emma during those years.
I wondered how she was. If she was happy. If she ever thought about me the way I still found myself thinking about her.
I knew she was still in Boston. I was too.
There were a couple of times I thought I saw herâfrom a distance, across a street, in passing. Just enough to make me stop for a second and wonder if it was really her.
I thought about going over. Saying hi.
But I didnât.
Some things⌠you just know better than to disturb.
She had her life.
And I knew where her heart had settled⌠and it wasnât with me.
And I told myself that was enough.
Even years later, when I was asked to reach out to her again⌠I told myself nothing had changed.
That it would just be a conversation. A simple hello.
But if Iâm being honestâŚ
the few times I had seen her before thatâ
that shouldâve told me everything I needed to know.
Because no matter how much time had passedâŚ
it never really felt like anything between us had.
I just hadnât let myself admit it.
Want to explore more of Emmaâs story? Visit Emmaâs Diary or learn more on the About the Book page. Links are below.
https://myunfinishedmelody.com/
Read more about Adam here:Â Adam – Unfinished Melody
Interested in reading the full story? Get Unfinished Melody here:Â Unfinished Melody – Paperback & Kindle
