Margaret froze in disbelief at the sight in their front yard: Martin and Janet, digging through her cherished garden. Their hushed tones and guilty expressions were unmistakable. When confronted, Martin stammered and Janet finally blurted out the truth—they were digging up a time capsule they had buried a decade ago when they lived in the house together. Supposedly, it was a harmless trip down memory lane. But to Margaret,
it felt like betrayal. Furious and heartbroken, she stormed into the house, then returned to the yard and lit a bonfire. As Martin and Janet laughed over the capsule’s contents, Margaret invited them to the fire. Then, without a word, she tossed the photos and letters into the flames. “Burnt bridges should stay burnt,” she said. “Let’s focus on the future—not the past.” Janet quietly left. Martin apologized, admitting he had been afraid—afraid of upsetting her,
afraid she’d misread his intentions. Margaret told him plainly: trust had been broken, and rebuilding it wouldn’t happen overnight. That night, she sat alone by the fire, thinking about the ruined garden—and the relationship that might also need replanting from scratch. Whether it could bloom again, only time would tell. But she knew one thing for sure: Martin was no longer the perfect man she once believed in—but perhaps he was still worth something real.