Finally, the night softened.
And no one felt like they were bracing for the next storm.
Sleep ca easily.
Morning arrived gently over the Maldives.
Sunlight spilled across white sheets and warm wooden floors. The ocean outside shimred in impossible shades of blue, almost as if it were trying to convince them to stay just a little longer.
But it was ti.
Suitcases lay open again — this ti not filled with anticipation, but with folded mories. Swimwear dried on balcony rails. Sand still clung stubbornly to the corners of bags, as if even it refused to let go. The twins dragged their feet dramatically while Mira struggled to zip up Ivy’s overstuffed suitcase.
"Do we really have to go?" Ivy asked, her lower lip jutting out in protest.
Lucien crossed his arms. "My sand fortress was almost legendary."
Cassian crouched in front of them, serious but warm. "You know what makes a place special?"
They blinked at him.
"Leaving with good mories," he said gently. "So you can co back one day and make even better ones."
Mira smiled softly. "And we’re not going ho-ho. We’re going sowhere new."
Lucien narrowed his eyes. "Does it have snacks?"
Cassian glanced at Mira. "It’s absolutely better."
She laughed. "It does. And music. And colors. And adventure."
That seed to ease the sting.
The drive to the airport felt different from the drive when they first arrived. Quieter. Thoughtful. The water sparkled outside the car window like scattered diamonds, and for once, even the twins fell silent.
Livia watched the islands slip past and felt that familiar ache in her chest — but this ti, it wasn’t sadness. It was gratitude.
Ryan nudged her lightly. "You okay?"
She nodded. "Yeah. Just... this place changed things."
He smiled faintly. "Yeah. It did."
Ahead of them, Cassian had one arm loosely around Mira’s shoulders while holding Lucien’s backpack with the other. Ivy skipped slightly ahead, already chattering about what xico might look like.
xico.
The word carried excitent now instead of logistics.
Inside the airport, the buzz of departure filled the air — rolling suitcases, boarding calls, last glances through wide glass windows. Mira paused for just a second before entering the terminal, turning toward the ocean one last ti.
The Maldives had been a beginning.
But it wasn’t the end of anything.
On the plane, as it lifted into the sky, the islands shrank beneath the clouds — tiny erald specks scattered across endless blue.
Mira pressed her forehead gently against the window.
"Goodbye," she whispered.
Cassian reached over without looking and intertwined his fingers with hers. "Ready?" he asked quietly.
She turned to him — not nervous, not overwheld.
Just ready.
"For the next Chapter?" she said.
He nodded.
Behind them, the twins were already arguing about who would get the window seat on the way back from xico.
And just like that, paradise wasn’t sothing they were leaving behind.
It was sothing they were carrying forward — in promises kept, in laughter shared, and in a future waiting for them under a new sky.
......
After a long flight filled with half-sleep, airplane als, and the twins arguing over whose turn it was to control the screen, they finally landed in xico.
Warm air greeted them the mont they stepped outside — different from the Maldives. Richer. Livelier. The breeze carried hints of salt and spice, and sowhere in the distance, faint music floated through the air, as if the country itself humd with rhythm.
Lucien stretched dramatically. "Okay... this already slls like tacos."
Ivy gasped. "Can we live here?"
Cassian chuckled, adjusting his sunglasses. "Let’s survive the wedding first."
Ryan, however, was already in motion.
The mont they arrived at the resort, his phone was in hand, sleeves taphorically rolled up. Calls. Emails. Confirmations. He walked slightly ahead of everyone, focused but energized.
Livia folded her arms, watching him with amusent. "He’s been here five minutes."
"And he’s already managing like he owns the place," Mira added with a soft laugh.
Ryan turned briefly. "I heard that."
"Good," Livia replied. "Stay stressed."
.....
While Ryan handled logistics, Cassian and Mira t privately with the wedding planner the next afternoon beneath a shaded terrace overlooking the turquoise shoreline.
Color palettes were displayed. Floral arrangents discussed. Ceremony layouts mapped out.
But Mira’s attention had already settled sowhere specific.
She had done her research.
When the planner ntioned Secrets Akumal Riviera Maya, Mira’s eyes lit up.
"Can we see it?" she asked.
They toured it later that day.
White sand stretched endlessly. Palm trees swayed lazily in the breeze. The ocean shimred in a perfect gradient of blue, almost unreal under the xican sun. The ceremony space was intimate yet elegant — open sky above, sea behind, space enough for family, laughter, and sothing unforgettable.
Cassian watched Mira more than he watched the view.
She walked slowly across the sand, imagining it — flowers lining the aisle, their parents seated in the front row, the twins dressed up but fidgeting, Ryan pretending not to cry, Livia definitely pretending not to cry.
"This is it," she said softly.
Cassian stepped beside her. "You’re sure?"
She nodded, eyes bright but steady. "It feels right. Not too loud. Not too distant. Just... beautiful. Warm. Like us."
He didn’t even glance around again.
"Then it’s perfect," he said simply. "Because you chose it."
When they returned to the group, Ryan imdiately straightened. "Well?"
Mira smiled — that unmistakable smile that ant the decision had already been made.
"Secrets Akumal Riviera Maya," she announced.
Ryan blinked once. Then twice. "Already decided?"
Cassian nodded calmly. "She chose it."
Livia smirked. "Of course she did."
Ryan sighed, though a grin tugged at his mouth. "Fine. I’ll coordinate with the venue team. Guest accommodations, ceremony tiline, vendors, permits—"
"Ryan," Mira interrupted gently, amused. "Breathe."
He exhaled. "Right. Breathing."
The twins cheered loudly at the word "beach wedding."
And just like that, it beca real.
Not just an idea.
Not just a promise beneath fireworks in the Maldives.
But a date. A place. A future taking shape under the xican sun.
......
That evening, as the sky lted into warm shades of orange and pink, Cassian pulled Mira close on the balcony of their suite.
"You happy?" he asked quietly.
She leaned into him, watching the waves roll in below. "Very."
He pressed a soft kiss into her hair. "Good. Because this ti... it won’t be a contract."
She smiled.
"No," she said softly. "This ti, it’s forever."
She lifted a finger slightly. "Oh, well... I’m not done."
He smiled knowingly. "Shopping?"
"You know too well."
"Of course I do," he replied smoothly. "A woman loves shopping almost as much as she loves gossip."
Her eyes narrowed imdiately. "Excuse ?"
He barely had ti to react before she swatted his arm.
"You are one sentence away from planning this wedding alone," she warned playfully.
He laughed and kissed her forehead. "Co on. Let’s go before you change your mind."
...
An hour later, they arrived at an upscale shopping district near the resort.
Mira was imdiately focused.
She held a sleek ivory suit jacket against Cassian’s chest. "This."
"I’ve been here thirty seconds."
"And I’ve already improved your wardrobe."
Minutes later, he stepped out in a tailored cream suit.
Mira froze.
"Well?" he asked, adjusting the cuffs casually.
She circled him once. "Turn."
He turned.
She nodded approvingly. "This is the one."
"Just like that?"
"Yes. You’re not allowed to outshine ."
He smirked. "That’s impossible."
She pointed at him. "Confidence is attractive. Overconfidence is risky."
He chuckled. "Noted."
Once his suit was chosen, it was her turn.
She disappeared behind the fitting room curtain with several garnt bags, leaving Cassian leaning casually near the mirrors, phone pressed to his ear.
"Yes, confirm the floral arrangent," he said into the phone. "Keep it elegant. Minimal. No dramatic arches."
He paused. "Because she’ll want sothing tiless."
As he spoke, the curtain behind him shifted.
He turned absently at first — mid-sentence.
And then he stopped.
Completely.
Mira stepped out slowly.
The dress she had chosen wasn’t loud. It didn’t need to be. Soft ivory fabric flowed effortlessly around her, hugging her waist before cascading down in delicate layers. The neckline frad her collarbone beautifully, and subtle detailing along the bodice shimred with every movent.
She looked—
He forgot how to breathe.
The phone nearly slipped from his hand.
"Sir? Hello?" the voice on the other end echoed faintly.
He didn’t answer.
He couldn’t.
Mira tucked a loose strand of hair behind her ear, suddenly shy under his unblinking stare. "Well?" she asked softly.
He ended the call without looking away.
For a second, he just stood there — mouth slightly open, eyes wide, as if witnessing sothing sacred.
Then he exhaled. "Wow."
She blinked. "That’s it? Wow?"
He walked toward her slowly, as if approaching sothing fragile.
"Mira," he said quietly, voice lower now, steady but unguarded. "You look..."
He paused, searching. "Dangerous."
Her brows lifted. "Dangerous?"
"Yes," he said, stepping closer. "Because if you walk down the aisle like this, I’m not waiting for vows. I’m forgetting them."
She laughed softly, cheeks flushing.
He reached out carefully, fingers brushing the fabric at her waist. "You’re breathtaking," he murmured. "Not just the dress. You."
Her teasing expression softened.
"For a second," he admitted quietly, "I couldn’t breathe."
She tilted her head slightly. "That dramatic?"
He shook his head. "Not enough."
The sales assistant nearby discreetly pretended not to stare.
Cassian took her hand gently, lifting it toward his lips. "If this is what I see before the wedding," he said warmly, "I can’t imagine how I’m going to survive the real day."
Mira smiled — not playful now, but deeply moved.
"Good," she whispered. "You’re not supposed to survive it calmly."
He laughed under his breath, forehead resting lightly against hers.
And after that they walk towards the counter.
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