The old city cinema wasn’t just a job for Emma. It was a place where the hum of the projector could momentarily erase the worries of the world.
Every Monday morning, Edward appeared, his arrival as steady as the sunrise. He wasn’t like the regulars who rushed in, fumbling for coins or their tickets.
Edward carried himself with quiet dignity, his tall, lean frame draped in a neatly buttoned gray coat. His silver hair, combed back with precision, caught the light as he approached the counter. He always asked for the same thing.
“Two tickets for the morning movie.”
And yet, he always came alone.
Why two tickets? Who are they for?
“Two tickets again?” Sarah teased from behind her, smirking as she rang up another customer. “Maybe it’s for some lost love. Like an old-fashioned romance, you know?”
“Or maybe a ghost,” another coworker, Steve, chimed in, snickering. “He’s probably married to one.”
Emma didn’t laugh. There was something about Edward that made their jokes feel wrong.
She thought about asking him, even rehearsing a few lines in her head. But it wasn’t her place.
The following Monday was different. It was her day off, and as Emma lay in bed, an idea began to form.
What if she followed him? It isn’t spying. It’s… curiosity. It was almost Christmas, after all—a season of wonder.
Edward was already seated when she entered the dimly lit theater, his figure outlined by the soft glow of the screen. He seemed lost in thought. His eyes flickered toward her, and a faint smile crossed his lips.
“You’re not working today,” he observed.
She slid into the seat next to him. “I thought you might need company. I’ve seen you here so many times.”
He chuckled softly, though the sound held a trace of sadness. “It’s not about the movies.”
“Then what is it?” she asked, unable to hide the curiosity in her tone.
Edward leaned back in his seat, his hands folded neatly in his lap. For a moment, he seemed hesitant, as though deciding whether or not to trust her with what he was about to say.
Then he spoke.
“Years ago,” he began, his gaze fixed on the screen, “there was a woman who worked here. Her name was Evelyn.”
Emma remained quiet, listening intently.
“She was beautiful,” he continued, a faint smile tugging at his lips. “Not in the way that turns heads, but in the way that lingers. Like a melody that you can’t forget. She’d been working here. We met here, and then our story began.”
She pictured it as he spoke.
“One day, I invited her to a morning show on her day off,” Edward said. “She agreed. But she never came.”
“What happened?” Emma whispered, leaning closer.
“I found out later that she’d been fired,” he said, his tone heavier now. “When I asked the manager for her contact information, he refused and told me never to come back. I didn’t understand why. She was just… gone.”
Edward exhaled, his gaze falling to the empty seat beside him. “I tried to move on. I got married and lived a quiet life. But after my wife passed, I started coming here again, hoping… just hoping… I don’t know.”
Emma swallowed hard. “She was the love of your life.”
“She was. And she still is.”
“What do you remember about her?” she asked.
“Only her name,” Edward admitted. “Evelyn.”
“I’ll help you find her.”
Getting ready to face her father felt like preparing for a battle she wasn’t sure she could win. Her dad, Thomas, was the owner of the cinema, and the one person who would be able to tell them about an old employee.
He was also a man who appreciated order and professionalism—traits he lived by and judged others for.
Edward waited patiently by the door, his hat in hand, looking both apprehensive and composed. “You’re sure he’ll talk to us?”
“No,” Emma admitted, pulling on her coat. “But we have to try.”
On the way to the cinema office, she found herself opening up to Edward, perhaps to calm her nerves.
“My mom had Alzheimer’s,” she explained, gripping the steering wheel a little tighter. “It started while she was pregnant with me. Her memory was… unpredictable. Some days, she’d know exactly who I was. Other days, she’d look at me like I was a stranger.”
Edward nodded solemnly. “That must have been hard for you.”
“It was,” she said. “Especially because my Dad, I call him Thomas, decided to put her in a care facility. I understand why, but over time, he just stopped visiting her. And when my grandmother passed, all the responsibility fell on me. He helped financially, but he was… absent. That’s the best way to describe him. Distant. Always distant.”
Edward didn’t say much, but his presence was grounding. Emma hesitated before opening the door to Thomas’s office.
Inside, he sat at his desk, papers meticulously arranged in front of him. His sharp, calculating eyes flicked to her, then to Edward. “What’s this about?”
“Hi, Dad. This is my friend, Edward,” she stammered.
“Go on.” His face didn’t change.
“I need to ask you about someone who worked here years ago. A woman named Evelyn.”
He froze for a fraction of a second, then leaned back in his chair. “I don’t discuss former employees.”
“You need to make an exception,” she pressed. “Edward has been searching for Evelyn for decades. We deserve answers.”
Thomas’s jaw tightened. “Her name wasn’t Evelyn.”
“What?” Emma blinked.
“She called herself Evelyn, but her real name was Margaret,” he admitted, his words cutting through the air. “Your mother. She made up that name because she was having an affair with him,” he gestured toward Edward, “and thought I wouldn’t find out.”
The room went silent.
Edward’s face paled. “Margaret?”
“She was pregnant when I found out,” Thomas continued bitterly. “With you, as it turned out.” He looked at Emma then, his cold expression faltering for the first time. “I thought cutting her off from him would make her rely on me. But it didn’t. And when you were born… I knew I wasn’t your father.”
Emma’s head spun. “You knew all this time?”
“I provided for her,” he said, avoiding my gaze. “For you. But I couldn’t stay.”
Edward’s voice broke the silence. “Margaret is Evelyn?”
“She was Margaret to me,” Thomas replied stiffly. “But clearly, she wanted to be someone else with you.”
Edward sank into a chair, his hands trembling. “She never told me. I… I had no idea.”
Emma looked between them, her heart pounding. Thomas was not her father at all.
“I think,” she said, “we need to visit her. Together.” She glanced at Edward, then turned to Thomas, holding his gaze. “All three of us. Christmas is a time for forgiveness, and if there’s ever a moment to set things right, it’s now.”
For a moment, she thought Thomas would scoff or dismiss the idea altogether. But to her surprise, he stood, reached for his overcoat, and nodded.
They drove to the care facility in silence. When they arrived, the holiday wreath on the door seemed oddly out of place against the surroundings.
Emma’s mother was in her usual spot by the lounge window. She was staring outside, her face distant. Her hands rested motionless in her lap even as they approached.
“Mom,” Emma called gently, but there was no reaction.
Edward stepped forward, his movements slow and deliberate. He looked at her.
“Evelyn.”
The change was instant. Her head turned toward him, her eyes sharpening with recognition. Slowly, she rose to her feet.
“Edward?” she whispered.
He nodded. “It’s me, Evelyn. It’s me.”
Tears welled in her eyes, and she took a shaky step forward. “You’re here.”
“I never stopped waiting,” he replied, his own eyes glistening.
Emma’s heart swelled with emotions she couldn’t fully name as she watched them. This was their moment, but it was also hers.
She turned to Thomas, who stood a few steps behind, his hands in his pockets. His usual sternness was gone, replaced by something almost vulnerable.
“You did the right thing coming here,” she said softly.
He gave a slight nod but said nothing. His gaze lingered on Emma’s mother and Edward, and for the first time, she saw something that looked like regret.
The snow began to fall gently outside, blanketing the world in a soft, peaceful hush.
“Let’s not end it here,” Emma said, breaking the quiet. “It’s Christmas. How about we go get some hot cocoa and watch a holiday movie? Together.”
Edward’s eyes lit up. Thomas hesitated.
“That sounds… nice,” he said gruffly, his voice softer than she’d ever heard.
That day, four lives intertwined in ways none of them had imagined. Together, they walked into a story that had taken years to find its ending—and its new beginning.