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"Late to Your Love: The Second Chance" Chapter 14

Vivian stared at her in utter shock.

Lin—the very girl who had written to her in her past life, saying, "I will become a teacher just like you."

"Mrs. Hurst, I passed the entrance exam for the normal university," Lin’s eyes shone with incredible light, "I graduate next year. Mrs. Hurst, I am truly going to be a teacher, just like you."

Vivian stepped forward to hug her tightly, her voice cracking, "That's wonderful... Lin, you are incredible."

Sylvester handed over a velvet box.

Inside was a copper key, resting atop a slip of paper covered in his bold handwriting:

"To my wife, Vivian Hurst:

I failed the lesson in our past life, but I will spend this entire lifetime learning the lesson of our present life.

Loving you as always, treasuring you as my life.

— Your husband, your student, Sylvester Hurst"

Vivian turned around, throwing her arms tightly around him.

Pressing her face against his chest, she heard him murmur, "Vivian, in this life, I will love you properly."

Inside the library, the children gathered together.

Vivian picked up a classical text, reading aloud in a gentle voice.

Sylvester and Harvey sat in the very last row.

Harvey whispered, "Daddy, Mommy’s lectures sound so beautiful."

"Yes," Sylvester’s gaze remained fixed entirely on Vivian, "Which is why Daddy is going to be her student for the rest of his life, listening to her classes forever."

Chapter 19

Ten years later, Seaport City High School celebrated its centennial anniversary, and the grand auditorium was packed to absolute capacity.

Vivian stood at the podium. Nearing her fifties, fine lines touched the corners of her eyes, and strands of silver were hidden amidst her long hair.

Yet her eyes remained as clear and bright as always, capable of looking right into a person's soul.

Seated below the stage was the essence of her life.

The young teenagers who had just entered the school, her graduated students, and her family.

Caleb Moore sat in the front row—now a core teacher at the school, and her apprentice.

Sylvester and Harvey sat in the family section.

Harvey was eighteen, a medical student determined to conquer pancreatic cancer.

Sylvester was fifty-one, the hair at his temples touched with frost, yet the hand gripping his son’s remained completely powerful.

"Today, I want to share a single concept with all of you,"

Vivian spoke, her warm voice echoing through the entire venue, "Cherish."

The massive screen lit up—displaying a picture of her from thirty years ago, youthful and timid, standing at the edge of the podium.

"Back then, I assumed teaching was simply explaining the textbooks thoroughly."

"It wasn't until later that I understood teaching is about showing people how to live, how to love, and how to... hold on tightly before it's gone forever."

The image on the screen changed.

It was a photograph of Sylvester’s silhouette in the kitchen.

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Wearing an apron, his hair slightly disheveled, he was carefully tasting a pot of soup.

A ripple of light laughter echoed through the audience.

"My husband," Vivian smiled, "We have been married for thirty-three years. For the first eight years, we were strangers."

"It wasn't until the final twenty-five years that we truly learned how to love each other."

"He used to be terrible. But now, he is the best possible partner, and the best possible father."

Below the stage, Sylvester’s eyes turned red around the rims.

"What does it mean to cherish?" Vivian’s voice trembled slightly, "It means that when you fall ill, someone holds your hand through the entire night; when you are scared, someone says 'don't be scared, I am here'; and when you say 'I'm tired,' someone offers their shoulder and says 'lean here for a while'."

She paused, taking a deep breath:

"I once came so close... to never having the chance to understand any of this."

A medical report displaying the terms "pancreas," "hypoechoic area," and "precancerous lesion" appeared on the screen.

The auditorium fell into an absolute hush.

"Thirteen years ago, I was found to have a precancerous lesion. The doctor said that without intervention, it would lead to the worst possible outcome."

"My husband rushed into the medical center and tore up the paperwork. He said: 'In this life, I bar you from ever leaving before me'."

The audience remained breathless, with only quiet sounds of weeping echoing through the silence.

Vivian looked toward Sylvester, tears shimmering within her smile:

"Therefore, I want to tell every single child here: cherish your health, and cherish those who love you. Do not wait until it is too late to feel regret."

She paused, speaking softly:

"Sylvester Hurst, for this lesson, you graduate."

Sylvester stood up.

Under the gaze of the entire audience, he walked toward the podium step by step, each stride feeling as though he were walking through his entire past life.

He pulled a small box from his pocket, revealing a golden teacher's badge engraved with the words: "Cherish Vivian."

"Vivian," his voice cracked with emotion, "Thirty-three years ago I married you, but I didn't know how to be a husband."

"It wasn't until twenty-five years ago when I nearly lost you forever that I learned the meaning of cherish. Thirteen years ago you gave me a chance, allowing me to relearn everything."

"Now, I am applying to be your student for the rest of my days."

He pinned the badge to her collar, bowing deeply:

"Mrs. Hurst, please guide me for the rest of our days."

Thunderous applause erupted through the hall.

Harvey rushed onto the stage, throwing an arm around his mother and the other around his father, shouting:

"And me! I am Mommy’s student too!"

The family of three locked themselves in a tight embrace on the stage.

The flashes of cameras engulfed them, yet they could never diminish the happiness they held so tightly in their hands.

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After the anniversary celebration concluded, the family of three went to the coastal park.

Vivian watched the tide, murmuring, "Sylvester, do you still remember? In our past life, it was right here that I..."

"Don't say it," Sylvester squeezed her hand tightly, holding it with immense force, "It's all in the past. In this life, it will never happen again."

Harvey was gathering seashells on the sand, suddenly holding up a conch, "Mom! Listen!"

Vivian took it, placing it against her ear.

The sound of the waves, the wind, and... a very distant, very gentle echo, resembling a calling.

"What do you hear?" Sylvester asked.

Vivian lowered the conch, a smile spreading across her face, "I hear... the sound of happiness."

The setting sun drew their three shadows long, overlapping completely against the sand.

Sylvester held his wife’s hand with one hand, resting his other arm across his son’s shoulder:

"Vivian, if there is a next life..."

"We don't need a next life," Vivian leaned her head against his shoulder, "This life has already been beautiful enough."

Harvey laughed, "Mom, Dad, you are being far too mushy."

On the drive back, Harvey fell asleep.

Vivian rested against Sylvester’s shoulder, asking softly, "Do you still remember the final words I spoke in our past life?"

"I remember," Sylvester tightened his grip around her hand, "You said: 'Sylvester, this time truly, we will never see each other again'."

"And what about now?"

"Now," Sylvester turned his head to look at her, the tenderness in his eyes nearly spilling over, "Now you say: 'Sylvester, this time truly, we will never be apart again'."

Vivian smiled, her tears falling alongside her smile.

But this time, they were sweet.

The car sped toward the direction of home.

There were lights waiting for them there, a warm meal, and their thirty-three years of stumbling yet clinging tightly together.

And... their remaining days, which were only just beginning.

This life was still very long.

Long enough for them to love each other properly, and cherish each other completely.

Until their hair turned white, and until the very end of time.

[The End]

 

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