Epilogue:
Beginning Eternity
Years ago, Valetta had asked me how I imagined my dream life. When I had
closed my eyes, I saw a life I wanted, but didn’t think I could ever have. And
yet, here I am, with Drei, living in a two story beach house on a lake in a
forest. Almost exactly as I had described.
Drei’s sisters had been buried in that single grave I had found. He paid
to have them exhumed and cremated, bringing their ashes back with us. The urns
had a room they shared with other memories, fond and painful. Pictures, news
clippings, items that held special meaning—including the rocking chair Drei had
found all those years ago, a maternal family heirloom of mine.
Another special place Drei and I had set up, though I had been reluctant
at first, was a garden. It wasn’t like his original, left behind and untended
at the original safe camp, but it was a close second. We didn’t have to build a
greenhouse, as there was an atrium that essentially functioned as one.
Together, we worked to find the right combination and proportions of flowers
with the initial goal of replicating the scent still following him around.
After a while, Drei and I both decided it shouldn’t be a replica because the
original had been a solution to his pain and a gift to me, his love. He
suggested I take more creative control over its composition as I was now in
need of channeling pain. I didn’t argue, and it wasn’t long after I started
feeling better. There was something about catering to life that balanced a loss
of it.
Kneeling by the water, I set some blossoms floating into the center of
the lake. My yearly ritual, because I didn’t have an urn or a grave to send them
to. The lake is the second best thing to him, as it is where we first met and
where most of our happiest memories were. It is also where he made his first
sacrifice for us.
I brush the tears from my eyes, wondering, not for the first time, if
I’ll ever be able to stop crying for him.
“Abriel,” Drei calls from behind me.
I watch the blossoms for a moment more before turning to jog up the
stairs to the balcony off our room where he waits. Where he has waited every
year on this day.
“Beautiful flowers you chose this year,” he says, opening his arms to me.
“Thank you.” The sadness dissipats again, waiting for next year. Tending
a garden really minimized my sadness surrounding the event to the point I only
felt it deeply once a year. And like clockwork, it’s back on this day; I wake
up with it and that’s how I know to go to the garden and pick whichever flowers
speak to me for my annual visitation. “Why does it feel like it hurts more
every year?” I ask, gazing out at the small specks on the calm surface of the
water.
“Because it is another year you have lived without him,” he replies
gently, rubbing my back. “And another year you realize he will not return to
say hello.”
There’s a truth to his words, more truth than I want to admit. It is the
first year I have asked, and I can’t believe he’s hit on it so well. No matter
what had happened, Nick had always popped up somewhere else, smiling, calming
me, apologizing for something or another from the time before. Subconsciously,
I think I’m still waiting for him to show up and apologize for scaring me so
badly.
“Nick is not coming back this time,” Drei whispers. I appreciate his
honesty; it’s the only way I’m going to stop crying on this day. And I know that.
But some part of me, somewhere deep in my heart, doesn’t want to stop hoping,
even if I know I should.
“I added the angel and the guardian to our memories room,” I say, changing
the subject. Although they have been available for some time now, Drei has
avoided adding them to our collection. I decided to correct the oversight.
“At least it is not a doll;” he smirks and I hit him lightly on the arm.
He is never going to let that one die. Though he continues to smile, his eyes
darken a little, growing more serious. “There is one thing you have yet to ask
me.”
The sky begins to lighten with the coming dawn as I try to think of what
he means. When it strikes me, I know why I hadn’t remembered. I haven’t thought
about it in years, and now I might finally have the answer I have been wanting
since Drei first mentioned it.
“Do you think you have fulfilled your promise to the Lady of the Moon?”
“I strive to deserve your love every day,” he says softly, holding my
gaze steadily, his amethyst eyes bright and resolute. “And I will never deserve
it until I strive every day hereafter.”
“There is no one else I would rather spend my eternity with,” I confide
before he kisses me.
A light crosses the forest and we stop, stepping into our room and
closing the French doors. It is my first sunrise since I had a pulse. Most of
them before now I had slept through, but not today.
“You know, if we ever grow tired of forever, I could change that,” I
remind him, resting my head on his chest.
“I do not imagine I will grow tired of spending my un-life with you,
Abriel,” he says as the first rays of dawn fill the room.
I miss it, though, because I’m looking at him, and all of the promises
that fill his eyes. Eternity is a long time, but he silently promises he will
love me everlastingly; and by the way he kisses me, I can tell he knows the
same is true of me.
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