Ten Years Later
Ten years passed.
Not perfectly. Not without scars. But they passed.
Maren grew tall—bright, curious, sharp-minded. Tessa opened a small bakery in Arizona filled with warm lights, cinnamon rolls that sold out before noon, and a front window where children pressed their noses against the glass to stare at the cookies.
Wade grew older in the steady way road men do.
More silver in his beard. More stiffness in his knees.
But his watchful eyes never changed, and he still had the habit of standing where he could see every exit whenever he entered a room.
On a warm May evening in 2028, he sat in a folding chair inside Maren’s high school gymnasium while families fanned themselves with printed programs.
When Maren’s name was called, she crossed the stage in her graduation gown with her chin high and her smile steady.
Then, before leaving the microphone, she paused.
“People are always told not to judge by appearances,” she said, her voice echoing across the gym.
“I learned that lesson from the bravest man I’ve ever known.”
The room grew quiet.
“He looked frightening the first time I saw him,” she continued. “But he turned out to be the safest place I ever found.”
Her eyes searched the crowd until they found Wade.
“Thank you, Uncle Wade, for teaching me that love doesn’t always arrive looking gentle. Sometimes it arrives loud, road-worn, stubborn… and exactly on time.”
Wade lowered his head for a moment, overwhelmed in a way he would never admit out loud.
But the riders sitting behind him had no such restraint.
They erupted into cheers, clapping far too loudly, whistling and hollering—embarrassing Maren exactly the way family is supposed to.
And she laughed.
That was the best part.
She laughed without fear.
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