[Pauline’s House]
The afternoon sun filtered softly through the tall windows of the sitting room, painting pale gold across the carpet.
Pauline sat by the window with a cup of tea cradled in both hands. The tea had long gone cold, untouched but she hadn’t noticed.
Her gaze was fixed sowhere far beyond the garden outside, distant and unfocused.
Margaret noticed like she always did.
Margaret lowered herself into the armchair across from her, cane resting against the side, eyes sharp despite the years.
She studied Pauline for a long mont—too long for it to be casual.
"You have been quiet," Margaret said finally. "Too quiet."
Pauline blinked, as if pulled back into the room. "I am fine," she replied automatically.
Margaret raised an eyebrow. "That answer alone tells you are not."
Pauline attempted a smile but it didn’t reach her eyes.
Margaret leaned back slightly, folding her hands over the top of her cane. "Is this about Jack?"
Pauline’s fingers tightened around the cup.
She didn’t answer, she didn’t have to.
Margaret exhaled slowly. "I thought so."
The room settled into a heavy silence, broken only by the faint ticking of the clock on the wall.
"He ca to see you," Margaret continued quietly. "Late at night and then he left the country."
Pauline swallowed. Her voice ca out softer than she intended. "He needed space."
Margaret watched her carefully. "Or he needed to run."
Pauline flinched—just a little.
Margaret’s tone softened. "Pauline, you have spent your whole life trying to protect everyone around you. Your sons, your husband, even , at tis." A pause. "But you cannot carry their choices for them."
Pauline stared down at her tea. "He is still my son."
"I know," Margaret said gently. "And that is exactly why this hurts."
Pauline’s composure cracked, not loudly, not dramatically but in the quiet way that hurt most.
Her shoulders slumped and her grip loosened.
"I keep thinking," she whispered, "what if I failed him sowhere along the way?"
Margaret’s eyes softened. "You didn’t."
Pauline shook her head slowly. "I loved Alexander differently. I see that now. Not more—just... differently." Her voice wavered. "Jack always thought I chose Alexander over him."
Margaret leaned forward slightly. "Children don’t always understand the shape of love. They only understand what they feel they are missing."
Pauline’s eyes shimred. "He was crying," she admitted quietly. "Like he was a little boy again."
Margaret said nothing, allowing the weight of that confession to settle.
"I didn’t ask him where he was going," Pauline continued. "I didn’t ask him why now. I just held him." Her voice broke. "And I let him go."
Margaret reached across the space between them and placed her hand over Pauline’s.
"Sotis," she said softly, "the only way a child can find his way ho is by walking away first."
Pauline’s lips trembled. "I just want him to be safe," she whispered. "I don’t care about anything else. Not the company, not the mistakes. I just want him to return alive."
That was it.
The tears finally ca—silent, steady, slipping down her cheeks as years of restrained fear and unspoken guilt spilled over.
Margaret rose slowly from her chair and pulled Pauline into her arms.
She didn’t rush her. Didn’t scold her for crying.
She simply held her.
"You raised them both," Margaret said quietly, stroking Pauline’s hair. "One stayed. One wandered. That doesn’t make either of them lost."
Pauline pressed her face into Margaret’s shoulder, clinging like a woman who had held herself together for far too long.
"I am scared," she confessed.
"I know," Margaret murmured. "But fear doesn’t an weakness. It ans you still love."
They stayed like that for a long while—two won bound by family, by loss, by the shared understanding that loving children ant learning how to let go.
....
[Carter Mansion — Late Afternoon]
The dining table was covered in papers.
Guest lists scribbled and crossed out, venue brochures stacked unevenly, a tablet open to a florist’s website and a notebook filled with lissa’s neat handwriting sat between two half-finished cups of tea.
Gregory stood at the head of the table with his reading glasses on, scanning a list like he was reviewing a business proposal.
"These numbers don’t add up," he muttered. "If we invite all your extended relatives and mine, we will need a venue twice the size."
lissa didn’t even look up. "That’s because you keep adding people you barely speak to."
"They are still family."
"They are still strangers," she countered calmly, tapping her pen against the page. "And Evelyn specifically said she doesn’t want a crowd."
Gregory sighed, removing his glasses and pinching the bridge of his nose. "I know. I know." Then, softer, "I just want everything to be right."
lissa finally looked at him.
For a mont, she didn’t see the businessman or the man who always needed control—she saw a father who was trying his best not to fail his only child.
She reached across the table and squeezed his hand. "It already is."
That was when Evelyn walked in.
She paused at the doorway, taking in the scene—her parents bent over wedding plans, quietly debating colors and numbers like this was the most important eting of their lives.
Her chest ward instantly.
"You are already at it?" she asked with a smile.
lissa looked up first, eyes lighting up. "There she is."
Gregory straightened. "Co here," he said, gesturing her over. "We are trying to decide if we should go with ivory or soft gold accents."
Evelyn laughed softly as she joined them, setting her bag down. "You two look very serious."
"We are," Gregory replied solemnly. "This is your wedding."
That word still did sothing to her.
Wedding.
She glanced at the lists, the notes, the care in every detail. "You didn’t have to do all this."
lissa arched her brow. "Excuse ? I have waited your entire life for this mont."
Gregory nodded. "And I intend to do it properly."
Evelyn smiled, her eyes growing just a little misty. "Thank you."
They fell into an easy rhythm after that.
lissa talked about flowers and seating arrangents. Gregory insisted on a venue that felt "secure and dignified." Evelyn chid in with gentle corrections—less formal, more intimate, nothing too extravagant.
"And no unnecessarily long ceremonies," Evelyn added lightly. "I don’t want people checking their watches."
Gregory chuckled. "Your grandmother would disagree."
Evelyn smiled. "She already does."
There was laughter—real, easy laughter—the kind that hadn’t filled the house in a while.
For the first ti since everything had gone wrong and then right again, it felt normal and happy.
lissa watched Evelyn quietly for a mont, then said softly, "You look lighter."
Evelyn didn’t pretend not to understand. "I feel safe," she replied simply.
Gregory’s gaze softened at that.
He cleared his throat and went back to the list. "Alright," he said. "Then we do this your way."
And in that mont, surrounded by scribbled notes, half-finished plans, and two parents who loved her fiercely, Evelyn knew whatever storms had passed, this part of her life was finally beginning.
....
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