I Went to My School Reunion to Take Revenge on My Childhood Crush, Until I Learned What Really Happened Back Then

I sat cross-legged on the living room floor with my old high school album spread out before me. The faint scent of dust and aged paper rose as I turned each plastic-covered page, my fingertips catching slightly on the edges. Every photo was a time capsule, a glimpse of the girl I used to be—bright-eyed, endlessly hopeful, and certain the future was just a bigger, better version of the present.

There I was, seventeen-year-old Joana Cooper, leaning against the brick wall outside the gym, my hair sun-streaked from endless afternoons on the bleachers. Beneath my yearbook photo, my carefully chosen senior quote still made me smile in embarrassment:

“Love is a two-person job.”

At the time, I’d thought it was wise beyond my years. Now it just made me laugh—until my eyes landed on his picture.

Chad Barns.

That easy grin, the tousled hair, the way his eyes seemed to look right through the lens and into you. My heart had done somersaults for him all through high school. I’d left him folded notes written on scented paper, shy doodles on the corner of his notebook, a heart-shaped box of chocolates tucked into his locker on Valentine’s Day. I had been sure—absolutely sure—that he was it for me.

Then, just before graduation, everything ended without explanation. Chad had stopped talking to me entirely. No fight. No awkward conversation. Just… silence. I had replayed those last few weeks in my head for years, searching for the thing I must have done wrong.

The doorbell broke the spell of the past. I slid the album shut and opened the door to find Lora, my best friend since sophomore year, beaming in a way that meant she had already decided this evening would be perfect.

“Ready for the reunion?” she chirped.

I hesitated. “I don’t know, Lora… Seeing some people again might stir up things I’m not sure I’m ready for.”

Her knowing glance was almost teasing. “This is about Chad, isn’t it?”

I shrugged, but she had already decided the answer. “Twenty years is a long time, Jo. Don’t give him that kind of power.”

On the drive there, my mind wandered between excitement and dread. What if Chad was there? What if he wasn’t? I wasn’t sure which possibility scared me more.

The reunion venue—our old high school gym—had been transformed with string lights and clusters of tables draped in white linen. The air buzzed with laughter and the kind of loud greetings that only come when decades have passed.

And then I saw him.

Across the room, older now, but still carrying that same unshakable presence. Our eyes met, and his smile was warm, almost… relieved.

I froze. Every instinct screamed at me to turn away, and Lora didn’t waste a second tugging me toward another circle of classmates. “Don’t talk to him,” she whispered.

But later, when she ducked away to clean a spilled drink, I slipped outside to the bench under the old oak tree—the same one I had once claimed as my private sanctuary after classes.

That’s where he found me.

“Joana,” he said, voice low, almost careful.

“Chad.”

We traded the kind of stilted small talk that hides bigger questions until finally he said, “I thought you didn’t want to see me after the letter.”

“What letter?”

“The one I put in your locker senior year—asking you to meet me at the park. You never came, so I figured…”

I stared at him, my pulse thundering. “I never got a letter from you, Chad.”

The truth landed between us like a sharp stone. And then, from behind, a voice: “What are you two talking about?”

Lora.

Chad turned to her. “You gave me Joana’s reply. You told me she wasn’t interested.”

Her face went pale. My stomach dropped as I read the guilt in her eyes. “I… I was jealous,” she whispered. “I didn’t want to lose either of you. So I made sure you never saw it.”

The betrayal was sharp and raw, even after all these years.

“Leave, Lora,” I said quietly, and she did.

Chad stepped closer, his expression both regretful and hopeful. “All this time, I thought you didn’t care.”

“And I thought the same about you,” I said.

We didn’t try to rewrite history right there on that bench, but we didn’t walk away, either. We sat, talking until the gym lights dimmed and the music faded. Two people who had lost decades to a lie, finally sharing the truth.

Maybe love was a two-person job, after all—one we were just now getting the chance to start again.

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