After twelve years of marriage, my world fell apart when I divorced Mark. In the midst of that pain, my best friend since college, Ava, stepped in. She gave me a place to stay, let me fall apart on her couch, and slowly helped me find my footing again. Eight years later, I ran into Mark. With a smug smile, he said, “Still friends with Ava?
I slept with her.” The words hit like a slap. I confronted Ava, and she admitted it—once, in a moment of weakness. She didn’t tell me because she didn’t want to break me further. Instead,she spent years trying to be the kind of friend who could make up for that betrayal. I was torn between the past hurt and the love she’d shown since. Days later, I met her at the park where our friendship had begun. “I can’t forget,”
I said. “But I don’t want to lose you either.” Some wounds don’t vanish. But sometimes, forgiveness lives where trust was once broken—and grace becomes the bridge between them.