And tell her to leave.
At the same time.
I stood abruptly, brushing off my jeans, my jaw clenched so tight it hurt.
Drew stood too.
“She doesn’t belong in this,” I said, not taking my eyes off her.
He didn’t answer.
And that silence said more than any words.
Because maybe she did.
Maybe she belonged here more than I wanted her to.
And maybe that’s what scared me the most.
Chapter Twenty-Six
Lydia
I should have stayed back.
I knew that.
I’d seen Callum from the tree line, kneeling at the grave like something inside him had come undone. Even from a distance, the weight rolling off him was unmistakable.
And then I saw the name etched into stone.
Lucy Lynn Carter.
His wife.
The truth of it hit harder when it wasn’t just whispered in a coffee shop or told secondhand by someone who cared. It hit when it had a birth date. An end date. A patch of ground carved out of the world where a love story once bloomed and died.
And he was still kneeling in it.
Still breathing it.
I stood frozen, my hands trembling, my chest so tight it barely let the air through. When he looked up, just for a second, and saw me, his eyes darkened like I’d stepped into someplace sacred without permission.
Maybe I had.
Drew said something low to him and stood up, brushing his hands off on his jeans. When he passed me, he gave me a small, tight nod. The kind that saidgood luckandbe gentle,andthis might hurtall at once.
And then it was just me and Callum.
Still kneeling.
Still not saying a word.
I hesitated at the edge of the path, my feet digging into the soft earth.
Then I moved.
Not quickly.