Page List

Font Size:

Jamie tugs at her elbow then, dragging her toward the carving table with a squeal about “monster pumpkins.” She glances back once before turning, and I watch her go like a man watching a wave roll out after almost drowning.

“I thought you’d be closer by now.”

Drokhaz’s voice breaks the silence beside me. I didn’t hear him come up.

I grunt. “Didn’t want to interrupt.”

“She looked happy.”

“She lookedfree.”

He hands me a paper cup. Cider. Warm. Spiced. Something to hold that isn’t a mistake.

I take it.

“You gonna talk to her?” he asks.

“Eventually.”

“Before or after you grow roots into this sidewalk?”

I glance sideways. He’s not smiling. Just watching her with that same unreadable look.

“She’s still carrying it,” I murmur. “All of it. The guilt. The fear.”

“She’s carrying less tonight.”

I sip the cider. It burns. Sweet. Sharp.

“She gave me a photo,” I say.

“Yeah?”

“She didn’t say a word. Just left it.”

“She doesn’t need to,” Drokhaz says. “Not anymore. She’s showing you.”

I nod slowly.

Because he’s right.

Because love’s not always loud.

Sometimes it’s quiet.

Sometimes it’s the press of a camera into your hand, a shared silence on a cliff, or a glance across a lantern-lit street that says,Don’t give up on me yet.

I watch her again.

And this time, I let myself hope.

CHAPTER 19

EVIE

The first rule of surviving a parade float build with a five-year-old? Surrender your pride at the door and accept that glitter glue will find its way into your socks.

The second? Don’t fight the chaos. Embrace it like it’s a lifestyle choice.