One last night before the next raid was scheduled.
My day was spent wandering from place to place checking in on our faction. Jessica was harvesting her first crop yield today, just over a month after planting. They were also in the process of building several more houses near the fields. Three large families had classes well suited for working with Jessica and she welcod the help.
There were a few others that had crop adjacent skills, one around alchemy and another around baked goods. They were also having hos constructed nearby.
It was a bit surprising to hear about a mana enhanced baker and I wondered what a doughnut baked by soone level 100 might taste like. I'd need to make sure that Jared knew this was a priority for our people.
From the fields I went and t with a few of the new arrivals. Cassie had beco the de facto representative of the group.
Most still spent their nights under the stars in the woods. We didn't have tents or other ans to house everyone but we were getting much closer.
Especially since our construction crew more than tripled. They hadn't been much help at first. The first two days pretty much everyone spent grieving. But little by little the weight of grief lessened—at least enough to start to contribute.
Each night since the tragedy, myself and a few others would walk the campground.
Five days. Five long days and people were actually healing. I even heard the sound of laughter while we t with a few families to introduce the new relief fund.
It was twilight now and I walked alone. Plenty of people still walked the paths through town, many greeting politely as they passed. It was nearly all humans.
The Guildian's spent most of their ti in their territory. Occasionally when they had business in the main part of town I'd see them, but at night it was a rarity. One day I hoped that it would be less segregated, but for now it was peaceful and that was enough for .
My gut told that the Guildian's would be far from the last alien faction that was incorporated into our fold.
It was my plan to et up with so of my friends at the fire outside my ho. I was already late on my way there when my feet caught sothing soft and I barely caught my balance before faceplanting.
"AAhhhh—Oh I'm so sorry!" A soft voice squealed at my feet.
I looked down to find a young woman lying on her side rubbing her hip. Mortified, I reached down and helped the woman to her feet.
She took my hand and I pulled her up, while I cast a healing spell. I recognized the small woman. I'd seen her many tis wandering the streets of the town. She had dark curly hair, and pink rosy cheeks. She wore dirty, baggy mom jeans and an oversized red flannel shirt
Matt's widow.
"No please don't apologize, I'm sorry for kicking you—I didn't see you down on the ground."
Wait. Why was she on the ground? Maybe she had dropped sothing? I looked at the ground scanning for anything that might be amiss.
"It's my fault, I should've been more out of the way." Her voice was soft, cheeks flush.
I couldn't see anything on the ground—that's when I noticed where we were. Tom's monunt. What was she doing here?
"Seriously, don't apologize. It was my fault." I felt embarrassed. And not just for kicking her. After more than two months I hadn't once introduced myself.
I wiped my hand on my robe and extended toward her. "I'm normally more careful about where I walk. I don't think I've formally introduced myself, my na's Layton. Are you ok?"
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The woman actually laughed. Sohow turning even more pink. "I'm pretty sure everyone knows who you are here."
She reached out and took my hand. "I'm Brooke. And I'm fine."
Her hand was soft and her grip gentle. I looked up at the monunt completely forgetting that I hadn't let go of her hand.
She chuckled softly. "You're wondering what I'm doing on the ground next to this monunt?"
That was exactly what I was wondering. I looked back at her, doing a bad job of hiding my confusion. Then I realized—I was still holding her hand and recoiled, my cheeks warming up to match hers.
"Actually yeah kind of." I admitted.
"I'm surprised you don't know."
I cocked my head. What didn't I know?
"I was praying."
Praying?
She was praying at Tom's monunt?
"You seed surprised."
I looked down at the woman. She was right. I was surprised. Shocked actually.
"Brooke. I…why are you praying?" My words felt brittle, I hoped she wasn't offended. Maybe I should apologize?
But she didn't seem offended. Her eyes were soft, red around the edges. I hadn't noticed it before. Had she been crying?
She shrugged. "I don't know." Her voice was husky. "Other people were. I just thought maybe it would help."
Her voice had quavered at the end, but she didn't let it break. "What was Tom like? That's his na right?"
"Yes, that was his na."
The question caught completely off guard. The truth was I hadn't really known Tom. Not really. And the little parts I did know weren't great.
Tom had made so very wrong choices in his life. Choices that hurt so many people.
Brooke wasn't looking at . She stared up at the immortalized image of Tom carved in beautiful white marble. I turned and looked at the image.
The monunt didn't reflect the man I rembered. Tom stood staring proudly into the future.
"He was complicated."
This wasn't the first ti I had thought about the monunt. The words "Forgiveness brings peace." were confusing.
I hadn't forgiven Jordan. I cut off his head. He had committed cris that I knew I couldn't overlook. How was I supposed to forgive n like that? It seed to be an ideal that contradicted itself. I felt like a hypocrite when I looked at it.
"Complicated how?" Brooke didn't look away from the marble figure.
"I think he was broken. He did things that I couldn't even imagine ever doing."
"Complicated." Brooke whispered. I didn't really know what else to say but I didn't just want to leave so I just waited.
"Matt was complicated also."
Surprised, I finally pulled my eyes off Tom to look at Brooke. "What do you an?"
Brooke didn't look at . She just kept staring at Tom.
"Everyone loved Matt so much. I did too. He was an amazing man." She paused, as if hesitant to share more. "He was stealing money from his boss."
The revelation hit like a ton of bricks. Matt was a legend to Jared's group. He fought and died a hero. Everyone who knew him had looked up to him, hell even I wanted to be more like Matt.
"Damn."
"I was getting ready to tell him I was leaving, and then everything happened."
This was more than I wanted to know. Why was Brooke telling all this? She touched the plaque, fingers running over the words.
"When everything happened, I couldn't live with myself."
Richard had murdered her husband. The husband who she was getting ready to leave. Everyone saw him as a hero, but she had to carry the weight of his secret.
"I'm sorry. That's a heavy weight to carry."
"It was." Brooke nodded. "But then you carried Tom here, and everything changed."
I cocked my head.
"I was so angry—angry at myself. Matt wanted to be better so badly, but I wouldn't listen. All I saw was a thief."
It was hard to bla her. I would have felt the sa way.
"And then he died. And all that resentnt, all that anger had nowhere to go. And that made even more angry at him, which made feel sick inside…"
Her voice broke and her shoulders started to shake. Unsure of what to do I placed a hand on her shoulder. She didn't pull away. She took a deep breath.
"These words." She touched the plaque again. "They healed —so now? I pray."
Brooke's words touched . Humanity was complicated. I was grateful that she had shared her story about Matt. But it did little to help grapple with what the words ant to . I had no regrets for how I handled either Richard and Jordan. How was I supposed to forgive them?
I still felt peace with my actions. Maybe forgiveness wasn't about sparing them. Maybe it was about letting go of what broke us.
Brooke rested her hand on mine. She looked up at and smiled.
"Thank you for listening."
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