Epilogue
Nora
Eagle River settled into itself again.
Not all at once — but steadily, like a held breath finally released.
The rumors never sharpened into anything ugly. People said there had been trouble. Outsiders. Something dealt with quickly and quietly. The town accepted that explanation the way it always had — with trust, with a collective shrug, and with a fierce protectiveness over what was theirs.
Life resumed.
The library reopened fully.
Children returned to story hour.
The Magnolia Ladies argued about flowers like nothing had ever happened.
And the tavern?
The tavern thrived.
On a crisp evening weeks later, the windows glowed warmly against the dark, laughter spilling out as music drifted across Main Street. Trigger was behind the bar arguing with Havoc about absolutely nothing. Saint fixed the jukebox again — for the third time — because Trigger had kicked it.
Wolf sat at our usual table.
Not guarding the door.
Not scanning corners.
Just there.
I carried two plates over and slid into the chair across from him. His eyes met mine instantly, soft and calm and so very sure.
“You look happy,” he said.
I thought about it.
“I am,” I answered.
And it wasn’t a fragile happiness.
It didn’t feel like something that could be stolen.
After everything — the fear, the truth, the memories resurfacing — I had learned something essential.
I wasn’t broken.
I had never been unfinished.
I was simply waiting for the moment I chose my life fully.
Wolf reached for my hand across the table, thumb brushing slowly over my knuckles like it had always belonged there.
“Thinking big thoughts?” he asked.
“Thinking about how quiet feels different now,” I said. “Not empty. Just… calm.”
He nodded. “That’s peace.”
Outside, the river moved steadily under the bridge. Inside, the tavern buzzed with found family and simple joy.
No shadows watching from the edges.
No eyes tracking my movements.
Those pieces of my life no longer owned me.
They never would again.
Later, when the night had wound down and the last chair was turned upside down, Wolf locked the tavern door behind us. We walked slowly upstairs, the familiar creak of the steps beneath our feet, the comfort of routine grounding.
At the top, I paused.
“You know,” I said, glancing back at him, “there was a time I thought peace meant being unaware.”
He studied me. “And now?”
“Now I think peace means being aware — and choosing to live anyway.”
Something warm flickered in his eyes.
“That’s the bravest thing I’ve ever heard.”
He pulled me gently into his arms, holding me without urgency, without tension. Just warmth. Just certainty.
“I love you,” he said quietly, like a truth he never needed to question again.
I smiled against his chest.
“I know,” I whispered. “And I choose you. Every day.”
We stood like that for a long moment, the tavern quiet below us, the town safe and sleeping.
The past remained exactly where it belonged.
Behind me.
And the future?
The future was open.
Steady.
Ours.
She hadn’t escaped the past—she’d reclaimed herself, and that was the sweetest victory of all.