Epilogue - Claire - One Year Later #2
My Christmas Days no longer include performing for a lens or chasing a deadline or trying to squeeze joy into a thirty-second clip.
Instead, I’m here on a couch in a cabin, wrapped in flannel, cinnamon, woodsmoke, and the kind of love that holds.
This is the content I never thought I’d get to create. It’s not just a romance or a rescue, but a life.
In fact, it’s a quiet, beautiful life that fits like it was always mine. I’ve spent years curating moments for strangers. However, the warmth of Jax’s chest beneath my cheek and the icing on my skin, well, this is mine alone.
He shifts next to me and sets his coffee down. His fingers trace a slow path along the curve of my hip, then pause, settling over my stomach.
“You warm enough?” he asks, but his voice has dropped into that place it goes when he’s not thinking about anything but me.
I nod, lips curving against his chest. “I’m exactly where I want to be.”
He murmurs something that sounds like mine and pulls the blanket higher around us.
Just like that, the day fades into softness, into silence, and a forever that doesn’t need words.
Outside, the snow keeps falling. Inside, our legs tangle under the blanket. Coffee cools in our mugs, and our bodies breathe, slow and full.
Before the world can touch this moment, he leans in, claiming my mouth with a slow, deep kiss that tastes of icing, and Christmas, and forever.
Twelve months later, and the cabin barely resembles the sparse bachelor space I stumbled into during that Christmas storm.
My collection of sketchbooks share wall space with his guide gear.
Art supplies and books are organized in the reading nook he built with his own hands.
The refrigerator displays images I've captured of Granitehart Ridge Retreat, action shots of the guides, candid moments of guests discovering their strength, landscapes showcasing the raw beauty of the Shenandoah mountains.
Our mountains. When did I start thinking of them that way?
"The spring marketing campaign exceeded every projection," I tell him, curling closer on the couch we picked out together. "Bookings are up forty percent from last year. Most new clients specifically mentioned the images as a deciding factor."
His hand traces lazy patterns on my hip. "Cade's been bragging about you to every resort owner within a hundred miles. Says you've revolutionized how people see wilderness experiences."
Pride swells in my chest, not just from professional recognition, but from how Jax talks about my work. Like it matters. Like I matter, not just to him but to the community we've built together.
"The other wives love having another creative in the group. Carlie wants me to photograph their anniversary session next month. Hannah asked if I'd document the baby's first camping trip."
"You're part of the pack now," he says against my hair. "They've adopted you completely."
It's true. What started as professional integration became something deeper. Real friendships, shared experiences, a support system I never knew I needed. The other guides' wives welcomed me, not as an outsider, but as someone who finally completed their circle.
The fire pops, sending shadows dancing across walls lined with our combined lives.
His guide certifications hang next to images of our mountain.
The Christmas tree in the corner sparkles with ornaments we've collected together; the camera he carved all those years ago, the tiny cabin from last year's market, new ones marking memories we've made.
“You’re the only gift I ever wanted,” he says, so quiet it feels like a vow. He holds me tighter and murmurs, “Merry Christmas, babe. We’ve made a home together.”
The snow outside hushes against the windowpanes, soft as breath.
The fire casts golden ribbons across his bare chest. When he leans in, I catch the scent of cedar smoke on his skin.
His thumb brushes the edge of my jaw, slow and reverent, like he’s still memorizing me, even after all this time.
I press my cheek into his hand and close my eyes.
The world is quiet, just us, the warmth between us, and the steady rhythm of his heartbeat beneath my palm.
“Home,” he whispers into my hair.
I believe it with everything I have inside me. Outside, snowflakes drift like wishes across the dark. Inside, I have everything I ever asked for, and something I never believed I’d find: a love that feels like coming home for Christmas.