Page 313 of Heart So Hollow

“But together—” Colson shouts.

“Rulers of creation!” the girls echo around me before the entire clearing erupts in a cacophony of howls.

As the howls and laughter die down, there’s a pause, and then a wave of gasps and murmurs as a faint sound permeates the mountain air. Howls of a real wolfpack echo over the valley, sending a shiver up my back. Their songs are like our stories, each one taking us down winding paths through the woods that lead us all back home. And, now, it’s our story to share.

Because if you keep howling, the wolves do come running.

EPILOGUE

Brett

Six Months Later

Aiden and Sydney’s house looks like something out of an old Hollywood movie. The grey stone Victorian mansion covered with tendrils of ivy and filled with urns and ferns lies hidden within groves of trees that lead down a grassy hill to the meandering Hellbranch Creek. Granted, it’s almost Christmas, so the creek is barely meandering right now, instead jammed with frozen debris and sheets of ice.

I imagine this house loves summer, when the pool is glimmering in the sun and towering trees cast shade over the sprawling stone patio. I’d half expect to see Sydney saunter through the French doors in giant black sunglasses, a silk robe, with her icy blonde hair flowing behind her.

But then I remember it’s Sydney, and even though she looks like she stepped off the pages of Vogue, it’s more likely she’d be shooting clays off the back patio rather than sunbathing. She also loves cooking…and snacks. Just like Tyler said, there’s a hot chocolate bar spread across the sideboard, complete with mini marshmallows and candy cane stirrers, as well as presents under a magnificent tree and a roaring fire on the massive stone hearth.

Dallas emerges from a room down the hallway, gently shutting the door behind her. She tip-toes across the marble floor, her eyes glued to the baby monitor in her hand as she makes her way back to the living room. It was her idea to set up a crib in the first-floor office so that we wouldn’t be too far away in case Ev woke up.

“Like a rock,” Dallas whispers triumphantly as she approaches the overstuffed sofas surrounding the fireplace.

It’s only been a month since Ev was born—Ev with my nose and Colson’s aquamarine eyes—and I was stressing about the cross-country flight right up to the point the airplane door sealed shut. That was before I immediately realized that tiny babies don’t care about long flights because all they want to do is sleep against their mom’s chest. It also didn’t hurt that we flew here in a plane chartered through Mason’s company instead of flying commercial, which quelled my fears about infectious disease…

And from the moment we stepped through the massive mahogany door in Dire Ridge, I’ve barely seen my baby, swept away by doting friends inhaling her sweet baby smell like oxygen. I should be exhausted, collapsed on a bed in one of the 9,000 rooms in this house, but the electric atmosphere of this place gives me energy I thought was all but dead. Instead, I’m in my favorite place, curled beneath Colson’s arm, breathing easy and watching the others flutter back and forth through the archway between the kitchen and living room.

The song playing over the speakers changes and gives me pause, “Wow,” I say as Wonderwall ends and Linger by the Cranberries begins, “I haven’t heard this song in…forever.”

“I hope you like 90s alternative,” Colson mutters, “it’s all that plays here.”

“I do…” I reply, letting my eyes wander across the room to Sydney at the sideboard, in her black leggings and loose, flowy red sweater, emptying a bag of red and green M&Ms into a small milk glass bowl.

Aiden approaches her from behind, wrapping his vast wingspan around her, as he usually does. I continue watching them with intrigue; Sydney so bright like she was birthed from the blanket of snow outside, while he looks like the raven straight out of once upon a midnight dreary with his jet-black hair and black tattoos that stretch up his neck all the way to his jawline and down to his knuckles.

As Dolores O’Riordan’s haunting voice drifts through the room, Aiden starts gently swaying. He presses his mouth to Sydney’s ear, his lips moving like a silent movie as he whispers to her. A moment later, she turns to face him, wrapping her arms around his neck. She sways with him as if no one else exists, eyes closed and her cheek pressed to his. Her mouth is slightly open, and every few seconds the corners twitch like she’s recalling a beautiful memory. She brings one hand around to his face, caressing his cheek like she’s memorizing every inch.

Dallas collapses onto the adjacent sofa next to Alex, “Just call me the baby whisperer,” she swings her legs across his lap, still riding the high of successfully putting a tiny infant down to sleep.

“That’s fortunate,” he runs his hand back and forth over her thigh, “the women in my family have lots of babies.”

“You wish…” Dallas retorts, weaving her fingers in his.

“Mi Angelína, you say that now,” Alex smirks, “but you always end up giving me what I want—” he flashes her a satisfied grin, “and then act like it was your idea all along.”

Dallas tries to stifle a smile, but can’t do it to save her life.

I glance up at Colson with amusement, “Are you mortified?” I tease him.

“I’ve gotten good at tuning things out,” he replies through slitted eyes.

Tyler suddenly appears at my shoulder with a handful of marshmallows, giving me a start. I didn’t even notice her sit down next to me. God, I feel like she’s always disappearing and reappearing out of thin air…

“Have you seen his tattoo?” she nods to Alex.

I shake my head, unaware that Alex even has tattoos. Add it to the list of things I learn about him purely by chance…

Tyler gives an exaggerated shiver and flashes her eyebrows at me, making my eyes round with curiosity, “Ask him to take off his shirt sometime,” she mumbles salaciously.