Different Paths

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-   -   Evergreen Mall (https://different-paths.net/showthread.php?t=189)

Seraphina Vale 05-14-2025 01:55 AM

Sera didn’t say anything at first.

She just watched Rowan. Not like a problem to be solved, not like a glass about to break—but like a truth she had the privilege of witnessing. A best friend mid-freefall, still managing to offer her heart like it wasn’t made of shaking hands and breathless bravery.

I don’t feel brave yet. But I feel safe.

Sera felt that land in her chest like an anchor. Not heavy. Not sinking. Just solid. Just real.

And the wildest part? She meant it.

Every word she’d said, every vow she hadn’t wrapped in ribbons. She meant all of it. She wasn’t going anywhere.

Not when Rowan looked like this—soft and scared and still somehow standing.

Not when Mason, infuriating as he could be with his too-big heart and those anxious hands, looked at Rowan like she was sunrise after too many storms.

Not when this moment—this quiet, trembling, real-as-hell moment—was the kind of thing that would’ve broken Sera in half just six months ago.

Lana had once told her that strength wasn’t about staying untouched. It was about standing open.

And Sera? She was open now. Scared, too. But ready.

She leaned back, shoulder resting against the wall behind them, her blazer creasing in a way she usually would’ve fixed. Today, she didn’t bother.

Her voice, when it came, was low. Warm. Certain.

“I don’t know what kind of person you become, Ro. But I know one thing.”

She turned her head, met Rowan’s glassy-eyed stare with one of her own.

“You won’t become her alone.”

A beat passed. The mall droned on around them—people, perfume, possibility. None of it mattered.

“You’ve got me,” she said. “Every step. Every version. The one that stays. The one that leaves. The one that figures it out. The one that doesn’t.”

Her smirk flickered back into place, faint but genuine.

“And Mason, despite being a cinnamon roll disguised as a person, would burn the whole damn world down if it meant keeping you safe. I see it now.”

She rolled her eyes, but it didn’t come with venom. Just a sigh of reluctant affection.

“I may think he’s emotionally allergic to furniture that costs more than thirty dollars, but that boy loves you like it’s his job.”

Sera nudged Rowan’s knee again, firmer this time. Reassurance. Re-centering.

“So whatever decision you make—whether it comes in a breath or after a thousand sleepless nights—you’ve got an entire battalion behind you.”

A pause.

“Even if that battalion is just me in four-inch heels and Mason looking vaguely panicked with a juice box.”

She turned her head, rested it lightly against Rowan’s.

“I don’t need you to be brave right now. I just need you to let us carry the parts that are too heavy today. That’s it. That’s the whole deal.”

And she meant it.

No matter where this went—doctor’s appointments, long nights, whispered doubt—Sera would be there.

Blazer. Croissant. Teeth bared if necessary.

Because Rowan wasn’t just her best friend.

She was hers. And no version of the future changed that.

Not even this one.

Rowan Starling 05-14-2025 08:30 AM

Rowan listened—really listened—the way she always did when Sera spoke like this. Like her words weren’t just comfort, but architecture. Foundations. Something to build the next version of herself on.

And God, wasn’t that what this felt like?

Rebuilding.

Not with blueprints. Not with some Pinterest-perfect idea of how life was supposed to go. But with fear and grit and the kind of friendship that didn’t require her to prove she was worthy of being loved through the chaos.

Sera’s voice wrapped around her like a second spine.

You won’t become her alone.

Rowan let that echo through her—soft and sharp and reverent. Because she’d never needed to hear something more.

And Sera—God, Sera. Sharp-tongued and terrifying in heels. The only person alive who could talk about battalions and juice boxes in the same breath and somehow make it feel like a promise.

Rowan’s mouth twitched. Almost a smile. Almost a sob. Somewhere between.

Because it was true.

Mason would look panicked with a juice box. He would forget to breathe if she told him she wasn’t sure about anything yet. But he’d stay. He already had. Even in the silence. Even in the not-knowing.

And Sera—well. Sera would knock on the gates of hell in couture and demand better lighting.

They were ridiculous.

They were hers.

Rowan blinked down at her lap. Her fingers had uncurled, resting loosely now over the fabric of her sweater. She didn’t even remember moving them. Didn’t plan it.

But slowly—hesitantly—she shifted her hand. Let it drift over her stomach.

Not in some cinematic gesture. Not a declaration.

Just a moment.

A question she didn’t have to answer yet.

A version of herself she didn’t have to meet today.

She exhaled slowly. Let it settle.

And then she looked up—past the railing, past the noise—until she spotted Mason across the atrium, standing in front of a store that definitely didn’t sell anything he’d normally be caught dead buying. His shoulders were hunched forward, a bag in one hand, squinting like he wasn’t sure if he was about to commit to something or panic-shop his way out of it.

Rowan smiled.

Small. Real. Honest.

And for the first time in days, it didn’t feel like she was bracing for the fall.

It felt like maybe—just maybe—she was learning how to land.

Rowan didn’t look away.

She watched Mason standing there in front of the shop like it might bite him if he moved too fast—one foot half-turned like he was debating whether to go back inside or just abandon the entire mission. His other hand ran through his hair in that same nervous sweep he always did when he was deep in his head and trying not to screw something up.

He looked… helpless. Hopeful. Hers.

And she wasn’t ready to tell him yet. Not all of it.

But God, she wanted to.

She leaned back against the bench again, her shoulder brushing Sera’s for just a second before she turned her face toward the skylights above. The light shifted through the glass, casting those strange fragmented shadows across the tile—like maybe the world was breaking open and softening at the same time.

“I don’t know if I’m going to keep it,” Rowan said, voice quiet but clear. Not dramatic. Not cracked. Just honest. “But I think I want to know what it would feel like… if I did.”

She looked back down, eyes tracing the shape of her hand against her sweater.

“I want to give myself permission to want it for five minutes. Without guilt. Without fear. Just… to wonder what kind of life it could be.”

She swallowed, the air in her throat suddenly sharp.

“I’ve spent so much time trying to stay small. Stay quiet. Like if I took up too much space, I’d owe the world an explanation.”

Her fingers flexed slightly, and she felt the beat of her pulse beneath them. Steady. Present.

“But this thing growing inside me—this possibility—it doesn’t care about all that. It just exists. And I think… I think part of me wants to exist like that too. Without apology.”

Her voice trembled just enough to remind her she was still scared. But she didn’t pull it back.

“I want to be the one who gets to choose, not the one who lets it happen to her.”

She looked sideways at Sera, met her gaze full on.

“I’m not ready to tell him everything yet. Not until I know how I feel about it. But when I do… I think I want it to be from a place of truth. Not panic. Not pressure.”

A pause. Then, with a rueful little smile:

“He deserves more than my fear.”

She looked back across the mall, watched as Mason finally ducked into another store—probably to stall, probably to overthink the next thirty minutes.

And quietly, like a breath she hadn’t let herself take until now, she said:

“And I think I might deserve more than my fear, too.”

Seraphina Vale 05-14-2025 03:24 PM

Sera didn’t respond right away.

She just watched Rowan—really watched her. The way her voice didn’t shake, even when her hands had. The way she sat with that terrifying maybe blooming quietly in her lap like a secret the world hadn’t earned the right to hear yet. The way she finally let herself want, not as a promise, but as a possibility.

And Sera? She felt something swell in her chest that wasn’t pride exactly.

It was reverence.

Rowan had just laid herself bare—thread by thread, heartbeat by heartbeat—and Sera had never loved her more.

She leaned forward, resting her forearms on her thighs, eyes still fixed on her best friend.

And softly—so softly, for someone who could command a room without raising her voice—she said, “You do.”

No sarcasm. No sparkly distraction.

Just truth. Sharp and clean as glass in sunlight.

“You deserve more than your fear.”

Her voice caught just slightly, but she didn’t let it show. Not yet.

“You deserve the whole goddamn world if you want it, Ro. And if you only want a corner of it—just enough space to sit in the sun with your hands in your lap and not be afraid of what’s next—then I’ll guard that corner like it’s sacred.”

She smiled, small and a little crooked.

“Because it is.”

A beat.

“And so are you.”

Sera turned her head, followed Rowan’s gaze toward the storefront where Mason had disappeared. Her lips twitched, not quite a smirk—something quieter.

“I don’t know if he’s in there looking for flowers or freaking out over whether you’d want lemon-scented candles, but either way… that boy’s not going anywhere.”

She shrugged like it was obvious. Because to her, it was.

“And when you’re ready—when you decide what comes next—he’ll show up. Because you’re not just his future. You’re his gravity.”

She sat back, smoothing her palms down the front of her blazer like the conversation hadn’t just gently dismantled her.

Then, glancing sideways with something sharp but warm in her gaze, she added, “And if you decide this isn’t what you want? If you decide the next version of you doesn’t include motherhood or Mason or anyone but yourself?”

She tilted her head, voice steady and clear.

“I’ll be the one dragging you through airports and champagne tastings and overpriced hotels with no sense of direction and a carry-on full of impractical shoes. No baby wipes. No minivan. Just you. Big. Loud. Free.”

A pause. Then—soft, nearly reverent:

“I will love every version of you.”

And God, she meant it.

Not the curated love, the polite kind you could post about. The real kind.

The kind that stayed on the floor of the mall when the world tilted sideways and the air smelled like cinnamon and nerves and not-yet decisions.

Sera nudged her shoulder again—gentle this time. All presence, no push.

“And when you’re ready to tell him, I’ll be right behind you.”

She smiled then, wide enough to feel it in her cheeks. Proud. Unshaken.

“You’re already becoming her, Ro. The version of you who doesn’t apologize for existing.”

A beat.

“And she looks good on you.”

Rowan Starling 05-14-2025 08:25 PM

Rowan didn’t realize she was crying until she felt the warmth trace her cheek—quiet, unchecked. Not messy. Not collapsing. Just real.

She didn’t wipe it away.

Didn’t hide it.

Because for once, it didn’t feel like weakness. It felt like something holy. Like something cracked open so the light could finally get in.

Sera’s voice lived in her chest now. Soft and certain. Like a lighthouse, not a spotlight. And every word she’d just spoken—every gentle vow, every fierce declaration—threaded itself into Rowan’s ribs like armor she didn’t have to earn.

Her mouth moved before she even knew what she was saying.

“I don’t know what I did to deserve you.”

It wasn’t rhetorical. It wasn’t performative. It was wonder. It was ache.

She turned toward Sera fully now, knees tucked up, arms folded loosely like she was trying to hold onto something fragile. But her voice? It didn’t shake.

“I don’t think I ever really believed someone would love all of me. Not just the funny parts. Not just the clever, emotionally distant, eyeliner-in-a-thunderstorm parts. But the scared ones. The breaking ones. The ones still deciding if they can live with their own reflection.”

She shook her head, exhaling through a smile that was part laugh, part disbelief.

“And then you walked in wearing something probably fire-code violating and said, ‘Cool, let’s light it up.’”

Her breath caught again.

“I’ve been so scared of becoming someone else that I forgot I don’t have to lose myself to grow.”

She looked down, brushing a knuckle under her eye, not to hide the tears—just to feel them. To own them.

“I don’t know what I’m going to do yet. I don’t. But you’re right. I want the choice to be mine. Not fear’s. Not timing’s. Not anyone else’s script.”

Her voice dropped, reverent.

“And God, knowing you’ll love me either way? That you’ll throw me in a cab to the airport or hold my hand through every cramp and craving?”

She paused, blinking through the burn of it.

“That’s what makes me feel brave.”

Rowan let herself lean. Just slightly. Her shoulder pressed into Sera’s like a promise—like a thank-you in the only language she had left.

They sat like that for a moment. Still. Together.

And then Rowan laughed. Quiet. Shaky. Alive.

“I hope Mason’s panic-buying a candle and not, like… a plush giraffe with gendered implications.”

She glanced toward the storefront again, just in time to catch a glimpse of his profile through the glass—jaw tight, posture familiar, heart probably beating out of rhythm because that’s just who he was.

Rowan watched him. Really watched him.

Then—without fanfare, without fear—she moved her hand again, laid it over her stomach with the lightest touch.

And this time, when she smiled, it wasn’t for anyone else.

It was for her.

“I think I’m gonna be okay,” she said softly.

Not because she had answers.

But because she had herself.

And because she had them.

Seraphina Vale 05-14-2025 09:16 PM

Sera didn’t breathe for a second.

Not because she didn’t know what to say—though, honestly, it would’ve been easier to crack a joke or comment on Mason’s tragic taste in mall kiosks. But because Rowan had just handed her something sacred.

Not polished. Not pretty.

Just raw. Real. Woven out of the pieces of herself she usually wrapped in sarcasm and tucked behind quick exits and perfect timing.

And Sera—who’d been told her whole life to be poised, to be perfect, to never take up more space than she could control—felt something inside her shift in response.

Not crack.

Not shatter.

Just… expand.

She let the silence sit. Let Rowan’s weight against her shoulder speak first.

And when she finally did speak, her voice came quiet. But sure.

“You didn’t have to do anything to deserve me, Ro.”

She turned slightly, enough for their knees to bump again, deliberate now.

“You just had to survive.”

She let that sit. Let it land the way it deserved.

“You survived and you stayed kind. You stayed funny. You stayed soft enough to feel and smart enough to question everything. You didn’t bury yourself just to make other people more comfortable.”

She swallowed around the tightness in her throat.

“And that? That’s more than enough.”

A pause. A breath.

“You’re more than enough.”

She leaned in a little, shoulder-to-shoulder, temple almost brushing against Rowan’s hair.

“And when you decide what’s next—whether it’s a candlelit nursery or a one-way ticket to Barcelona—I’ll be there.”

Then—smirking now, because she couldn’t resist:
“But I swear to God, if he does walk out of there with a gendered giraffe, we’re staging an intervention.”

Rowan laughed, quiet and warm, and Sera’s heart tugged in that painful, protective way it always did when the people she loved let themselves be.

No masks. No apologies.

Just here.

Sera glanced toward the store, caught a flicker of Mason’s silhouette, still pacing, still panicking.

She smiled.

Because despite it all, somehow—they were okay.

Rowan. Mason. Her.

They were going to figure it out.

Not because life was suddenly easier. But because they’d stopped pretending they had to face it alone.

And as Sera sat there—shoulder pressed to her best friend’s, coffee long forgotten, future unformed but full—she felt it:

The quiet kind of certainty that didn’t need to be shouted.

Just held.

Rowan Starling 05-14-2025 10:03 PM

Rowan didn’t move.

Didn’t speak right away.

She just breathed—slow and even—for what felt like the first time in days.

Sera’s words had landed like anchors in all the places where Rowan had felt unmoored. Gentle, fierce, steady things that tethered her to herself, to this moment, to something real.

And then she turned—just a little—and looked through the glass storefront in front of them.

Not to distract herself.

To see.

Mason was still pacing inside, caught between a rack of candles and a display of mugs that probably said something tragically earnest like Best Dad Ever or Coffee First, Panic Later. His brows were knit, his shoulders hunched like he was holding the whole weight of their maybe-future and praying he didn’t screw it up.

He was awkward. Overthinking. Wildly out of his depth.

God, she loved him.

Not the scripted kind of love. Not the butterflies and fireworks and midnight text message kind of love.

The after kind.

The kind that doesn’t know the answers, but still shows up. Still tries. Still holds out hope that love can be built with shaking hands and no blueprint.

Rowan stared through the glass like it held answers. Like somewhere between the citrus-scented chaos and Mason’s frantic gift-hunting, her whole future was pacing with a credit card and too much hope.

And quietly—terrifyingly—she wanted it.

Not just the survival of it.

The living of it.

Her hand slid over her stomach, more certain now. Not to brace. Not to guard.

To hold.

To acknowledge.

To begin.

Her voice came low, soft, but sure.

“I think I want it.”

She didn’t look at Sera when she said it. Just kept her eyes on Mason. On the boy who had looked at her like she was the sun, even when she only saw the shadows.

“I think I want all of it. Him. This. Even the giraffe, probably.”

She smiled through it, watery and a little wrecked.

“I’m not saying I’m ready. I’m not saying I’m not still scared shitless. But I keep picturing this version of the future—holidays, school drop-offs, Saturday mornings where I’m yelling at him for feeding the kid two Pop-Tarts and a juice box before 9 a.m.”

Her throat tightened, but she kept going.

“And the more I see it, the more I realize… if we do this, really do this? I don’t want to look back someday—crowded table, laughing too loud, surrounded by everyone we love—and feel like someone’s missing.”

Her fingers curled slightly, grounding herself.

“I don’t want to wonder who they would’ve been.”

She finally turned toward Sera, and this time, her gaze didn’t waver. It was open. Clear. Unapologetic.

“I don’t have a perfect plan. But I think I’m starting to believe we could build something real. Messy. Loud. A little unhinged.”

She smiled—full, unguarded, home.

“And if I get to do it with someone who buys panic candles and a best friend who threatens strangers in baby boutiques?”

Her voice broke into something lighter, warmer.

“Then I think I already have everything I need.”

Rowan let her head fall gently to Sera’s shoulder, the weight of it not exhaustion, but relief. Her hand still rested over her stomach. Her gaze drifted back to the store, to the boy still pacing like the world might break and he’d be the one to glue it back together.

And for the first time, she didn’t feel afraid of the unknown.

She felt like maybe, just maybe, she was already writing the beginning of something beautiful.

Seraphina Vale 05-14-2025 10:18 PM

Sera blinked once. Twice.

Not because she didn’t believe Rowan—she’d felt the shift the moment it settled. The kind of quiet certainty that didn’t need to be shouted to be real. But still, hearing the words—I think I want it—hit her in a way she hadn’t expected.

She swallowed around the sudden ache in her throat, staring straight ahead like if she moved too quickly the moment might flicker out. Rowan’s head was on her shoulder now, warm and familiar, and Sera could feel the steady weight of her best friend finally choosing—really choosing—something just for her.

And God, wasn’t that the most beautiful kind of terrifying?

Sera tilted her head slightly, letting it rest against Rowan’s crown, voice soft but wickedly sure.

“Well,” she said, “I guess that makes me the cool aunt now.”

A beat.

“Which means I’ll be spoiling that child rotten. I’m talking designer onesies. I’m talking bedtime stories in six languages. I’m talking a five-year-old who knows the difference between oat milk and a power play.”

Rowan snorted—quiet but alive—and Sera grinned, smug and smugger.

“And let’s be clear,” she added, pulling back just enough to look down at her, eyes bright with mischief and something deeper, “I will one hundred percent be the reason your kid starts swearing in French before they learn the alphabet. And I will take no responsibility.”

Her grin softened around the edges, settling into something gentler.

“I mean it, Ro. I’m all in. Diaper runs. 2 a.m. breakdowns. Side-eying Mason when he buys the wrong pacifier and gaslighting him into thinking I never told him otherwise.”

She exhaled, letting the weight of the moment breathe with them.

“And when things get hard—and they will—I’ll be here. Not just to hold your hand. To hold you, if you need it. No questions asked.”

Her voice dipped, quiet but unwavering.

“I’ll be here for the baby. For you. For every loud, messy, brilliant second of whatever this becomes.”

She looked toward the storefront then, just as Mason emerged with a small shopping bag and the expression of someone who’d survived a mild war but wasn’t sure who’d won.

Sera’s smirk returned, fond and exasperated.

“He bought something. God help us all.”

Rowan didn’t move—still leaning into her, still holding the quiet with both hands.

And Sera?

Sera let her stay.

Because this wasn’t the end of anything.

This was the beginning.

And Sera Vale?

She was exactly where she needed to be—shoulder steady, heart wide open, and ready to be someone’s goddamn favorite auntie.

Matching sunglasses included.

Rowan Starling 05-14-2025 10:22 PM

Rowan didn’t lift her head.

She didn’t need to.

Sera’s voice rolled through her like warmth after a storm—equal parts irreverent and irreplaceable—and Rowan just let herself stay in it. In her. The safety of it. The certainty. The kind of love that didn’t hinge on milestones or promises, just presence.

Her hand still rested over her stomach, and for the first time, it didn’t feel like a question.

It felt like hers.

And with Sera’s shoulder pressed firm beneath her cheek, Rowan felt the quiet begin to settle. Not like surrender. Like acceptance. Like something wild and soft and honest blooming in the space where fear had lived for too long.

A laugh escaped her—quiet, breathy, completely helpless.

“Oat milk and a power play?” she mumbled into Sera’s blazer, voice muffled and laced with affection. “You’re unhinged.”

Sera hummed proudly like it was a compliment, which—of course—it was.

Rowan turned her head just enough to glance up at her, eyes still wet but alive in that very specific way only Sera could pull out of her.

“I’m not letting you teach them French swear words, by the way,” she said. “That’s, like… third-grade curriculum. Minimum.”

Sera just raised an eyebrow, not even remotely deterred, and Rowan shook her head, letting the moment wash over her like something holy disguised as banter.

But then—quieter—her fingers flexed slightly, a barely-there movement over her stomach, and she added:

“I’m glad it’s you.”

She didn’t explain it. Didn’t need to.

Sera knew.

And when Sera said she was all in—every diaper run, every late-night meltdown, every time Mason forgot what drawer the wipes were in and needed to be gently bullied back into competence—Rowan believed her.

Every word.

Because Sera had always been the one to stay. The one who didn’t flinch when things got real. The one who could slice through a crisis with sarcasm and a winged eyeliner sharper than most people’s moral compass—and still somehow hold you when it all came undone.

And now?

Now she was the cool aunt with emotional depth and designer taste and possibly the world’s worst filter.

Rowan reached for her hand—no fanfare, no big moment. Just reached. Fingers curling into Sera’s like she was anchoring the version of herself that had just been born. The one who wanted this.

Not just the idea of it.

The reality.

She followed Sera’s gaze toward the storefront and saw Mason finally reappear, holding the bag like it might explode if he handled it too confidently.

God, he looked wrecked.

God, he looked perfect.

Her heart clenched.

Because that was hers, too.

And suddenly, everything felt more possible than terrifying.

Still scary. Still unknown.

But not a cliff.

A step.

Rowan smiled—small, quiet, but impossibly real.

“I think we’re gonna be okay,” she whispered. “Me. Him. All of it.”

And as Mason caught her eye and lit up—nervous and proud and so very his awkward self—Rowan knew:

They weren’t doing this alone.

They never had been.

Seraphina Vale 05-14-2025 10:31 PM

Sera didn’t move.

Didn’t speak.

Not right away.

Because what could she possibly say in the face of that kind of truth? That kind of choosing?

Rowan’s fingers curled into hers like something blooming—not breaking—and Sera swore she felt it in her chest. A tether. A vow. A soft, wordless I’m ready.

She blinked once, just to make sure her mascara wasn’t about to betray her, then exhaled through her nose. Carefully. Like the moment deserved reverence, even if she still planned to roast Mason the second he got within ten feet of them.

“I’m glad it’s me too,” she murmured, squeezing Rowan’s hand once. “Though, full transparency, I’m going to be insufferable about it.”

Rowan snorted into her blazer again, and Sera allowed herself a small, victorious smile.

Because this?

This was how they did it.

The big decisions. The terrifying shifts. The wild, impossible magic of becoming something new.

With iced coffee, with panic candles, with hands held and futures rewritten in food court lighting.

She looked at Mason again—poor, sweet Mason—standing like he was one wrong move away from setting off a glitter bomb of emotional consequences. He was so painfully earnest. So deeply in over his head. And yet… there he was. Still trying. Still staying.

Sera’s chest went tight.

God, she hated how much she respected him for it.

“I swear to God,” she muttered, lips twitching, “if he bought a ‘World’s Coolest Mom’ mug, I’m making him return it and write you a poem instead.”

Rowan didn’t answer, just breathed a laugh that sounded like spring after a long, hard winter.

And Sera?

Sera stayed right there.

Holding Rowan’s hand. Holding the moment. Holding the version of her best friend that had just been born right in front of her.

Brave. Honest. Chosen.

“I think you’re gonna be more than okay,” Sera said, finally. Her voice low, like a secret passed between them. “I think you’re gonna be legendary.”

And this time, she didn’t say it like a joke.

She said it like a prophecy.

Rowan Starling 05-14-2025 11:05 PM

Rowan didn’t speak.

She couldn’t—not with the way her throat had gone tight and traitorous and too full of every version of thank you she didn’t know how to say out loud.

Because Sera had just named it.

Not the fear. Not the chaos. But the becoming.

The terrifying, tender stretch of what it meant to step into a version of herself she hadn’t even dared to imagine. One that wasn’t built from defense mechanisms or exit strategies or the illusion of control—but from choice. From hope.

From something that sounded an awful lot like love.

She let herself lean harder into Sera for a beat longer. Let her fingers curl more firmly between theirs, anchoring herself to the girl who had never once asked her to be smaller, safer, less.

And God, when Sera said legendary—

Rowan felt it.

Not like pressure.
Like possibility.

Like maybe she could still be everything she wanted.
Mother. Maker. Firestarter. All of it.
No apologies. No shrinking.

She closed her eyes.
Took a breath.
Held it.

Then—softly, like it was a truth being carved into her ribcage:

“You always make me feel like I can do things I didn’t think I was allowed to want.”

She meant it. Every syllable.

And when she opened her eyes again, the weight in her chest hadn’t vanished—but it had changed. Shifted. Became something she wasn’t dragging anymore. Something she was carrying on purpose.

“I don’t know if I’ll be good at this,” she added, voice rough but steady. “But I think I want to try.”

She glanced back toward Mason, who had now officially entered the purgatory known as gift bag contemplation and looked like he might combust trying to choose between metallic tissue paper or polka dots.

Rowan huffed a breath. Shook her head.

“I love that idiot,” she said quietly. “So much it scares me.”

Her thumb brushed lightly over the back of Sera’s hand.

“But it doesn’t scare me more than this.”

Her other hand shifted—instinctive, reverent—over her stomach.

Because this wasn’t the end.

This was a beginning.

And for the first time, she didn’t feel like she was standing on the edge of her life.

She felt like she was stepping into it.

With Mason’s chaos.
With Sera’s fire.
With her own impossible, unstoppable heart.

She squeezed Sera’s hand once more—tight, grateful, anchored—then let it go as Mason started toward them, bag in hand and expression somewhere between hopeful and absolutely wrecked.

Rowan stood. Smoothed the hem of her soft blue sweater. Swiped a thumb beneath her eye, just in case.

And when she turned toward him, when he saw her standing there—really standing—she watched his whole face change.

Like maybe he could tell.

Like maybe he’d felt the shift, too.

She took a single step forward. Then another.

And as Mason’s free hand reached out—just barely, just enough—Rowan reached back.

No more running.
No more maybe.

Just now.
Just them.
Just this.

And as her fingers laced with his and Sera rose behind her, flanking her like the fiercest goddamn aunt-in-waiting the world had ever seen, Rowan smiled.

Not because everything was figured out.

But because—for the first time—she wasn’t afraid of finding out.


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