Ella, If youâre reading this, it means I canât see you in January like we planned. Iâm so very sorry. I used to say that I couldnât be scared while I was here, because I had nothing to lose. But the minute I read your first letter, that all changed.
I changed.
If I never told you, then let me say it now. Your words saved me. You reached into the darkness and pulled me out with your kindness and your strength. You did the impossible and touched my soul.
Youâre a phenomenal mother. Never doubt it. Youâre enough. Those kids are so lucky to have you on their side. No matter what happens with Maisieâs diagnosis, or Coltâs stubbornness, you are the biggest blessing those kids could ever ask for.
Do something for me? Contact my financial manager. His number is at the bottom. I changed my life insurance to Colt and Maisie. Use it to send them to college, or give them the start they need to find their passion. I canât think of a better use for it.
Want to hear something crazy? Iâm in love with you. Thatâs right. Somewhere between letter number one and twenty or so, I realized I was in love with you. Me, the guy who canât connect to other humans, fell for the woman heâs never been in the same room with.
So if Iâm gone, I want you to remember that. Ella, you are so incredible that you made me fall in love with you with only your words.
Donât keep your words to yourself. No matter what, find someone who wants to hear them as badly as I do. Then love.
And do me a favorâlove enough for the both of us.
All my love, Beckett Gentry Call Sign Chaos â¦
Three months later.
âWhere do you want this?â Beckett asked, holding a box marked âkitchen.â
âProbably the kitchen,â I teased.
âHa, ha,â he fake-laughed as he carried it past me into the kitchen, setting it with the others.
âHow many more do you have out there?â I asked from the great room.
âJust a few of the stragglers in the truck. Why?â He gripped my hips and pulled me to him. âHave plans for me?â
âMaybe,â I said with a slow smile. Somewhere in the last month, Iâd stopped faking the small smiles. The bigger ones were still purely for Maisieâs benefit, but the tiny ones? Those were real. Those were mine.
âI like the sound of that.â He lowered his head until our lips met in a kiss. âWould these plans maybe include the shower? Because I had this little bench built into itââ
An icy blast of air hit us as the front door flew open. We turned to see Maisie and Emma fly in, snow covering their hats as they stomped their way to the mudroom giggling.
âThat zip line is the best!â Emma said as her boots hit the floor.
âRight? Wait until itâs summer and we can do the other one that goes into the lake!â Maisie added.
The one Beckett had built a few weeks after Colt died. He did a million things like thatâkeeping Colt with him in his own way. Maisie was right, both of Beckettâs best friends were on that island, and just as Ryan had a part of Beckett that I might never know, so did Colt.
Beckett kissed me again quickly and headed to the garage for another box.
âHow about some hot chocolate, girls?â I offered.
âYes, please!â they both answered at the same time.
I pulled the cocoa down and started, pausing to admire the view of the snow falling on the frozen lake. My heart gave that familiar warning, and I looked away from the island, concentrating on getting mugs for the girls.
I missed Colt every day. Every minute.
But the months had given me just enough time that every second didnât belong to my grief. And I knew that time span would only grow. It would never leave entirely, but at least I wasnât capsizing on that ocean of grief with every heartbeat anymore. The waves still came in. Sometimes they were predictable, like the tide. Other times they hit me with the force of a tsunami, sending me tumbling so deep that I felt like I was at day one again, instead of day 105.
The girls ran in, hopping on the barstools Iâd bought to slide under the granite expanse. They laughed and talked about the upcoming Christmas play. I poured the cocoa and plopped a few marshmallows in before sliding them across the counter.
âThanks, Mrs. MacKenzie,â Emma said before taking a sip.
I didnât correct her about the Mrs., just smiled. âNo problem.â
âThanks, Mom!â Maisie said, sipping at hers.
Beckett walked in with another box and put it with the stack next to the kitchen table. Then he leaned back against the counter with me. âWhat is this language?â he asked, staring at the girls.
âGirl speak,â I informed him. âTheyâre discussing the guest list for Emmaâs birthday party next month.â
Maisieâs birthday had just passed. She was eight now, older than Colt would ever be. She would grow and mature and thrive, but Colt would stay forever frozen at seven years old. The day had been hard, but Maisie had invited her new best friend.
Turned out that when Emma and Maisie both lost Colt, they found each other. Even gone, he was still giving gifts to his sister.
âCocoa, huh?â Beckett asked, stealing a sip of Maisieâs.
âDad!â she chided with a giggle.
God, I loved the sound of that just as much as she loved saying it. Weâd told her after the funeral, knowing she deserved to know every day of her life that Beckett loved her so much heâd become her dad. Heâd saved her life, but that was something we kept between the two of us.
Beckett kissed my cheek and started opening the boxes, laughing when he found one of Coltâs toys stashed in one of the pans. I loved that about him, the way he could talk about Colt and smile through the pain. He kept him alive in more ways than one. Through the zip lines, the pictures he hung around the house, the framed red leaf. He was never afraid to say his name, and more than once Iâd come home to find him and Maisie snuggled up on the couch watching video clips of Colt.
I had yet to make it through one without crumbling. Maybe one day Iâd be able to smile at the sound of Coltâs voice. For now, it was simply a reminder of what Iâd lost and how empty everything felt without him.
Beckett kept us moving forward at a pace that was uncomfortable but manageable. He never let me wallow too long, but never let me ignore the pain, either. He pushed my boundaries and then backed off, and if not for him, I might have chosen to simply stop moving at all.
Maisie kept my heart beating.
Beckett kept me living.
I made sure they both knew I loved them every day.
It had taken almost all of the three months, but I finally read Beckettâs last letter, and that was what got me here, into this house he built for the four of usâthat would now house three.
Love enough for the both of us. Thatâs what heâd said in the letter. And it spoke to my heart in a way nothing else could. Because thatâs what Colt would have wanted. He would have wanted to move into this house and live our life with the guy we all loved.
The man who craved my words and owned my heart.
Heâd signed that letter with his real name. The last words Chaos had spoken to me merged the two men I loved until I saw them both in the Beckett who was currently looking at my garlic press like it was a torture device.
âThis drawer,â I told him, opening the one at my hip.
âEyelash curler?â he asked, dropping it in the drawer.
âItâs for smoothies. Works great on strawberries.â I shrugged.
âLiar!â He laughed, then went back to unpacking.
I glanced out the window at the island and took a steadying breath as that ache ripped into me. Then I grabbed the next box and started unpacking, item by item, merging my life with Beckettâs. I moved forward because thatâs where Beckett and Maisie were, and thatâs what Colt would have wanted. After all, he was here, too, in every line of this house Beckett had built for himâfor us.
I still heard echoes of his footsteps on the stairs, his laugh in the halls. There were even moments I swore I caught the scent of his sunshine-soaked hair, like heâd sneaked in for a hug and run off again before I could capture him fully. The bedroom Beckett kept for him was untouched except for the boxes weâd brought from my house. I wasnât ready to go there yet, and that was okay.
There were too many memories I wasnât ready to pack away. Iâd taken one look at the helmet Colt had worn that first Halloween in the hospital and known I wouldnât be able to make it through a single box.
But Maisie had grabbed the helmet and smiled, remembering when sheâd traded with Colt to wear it that night.
Heâd worn her halo.
Like theyâd known theyâd eventually switch roles.
Like it had been planned all along, and Iâd simply missed the signs.
âDo you think the lake is frozen enough to walk on?â I asked Beckett.
He gave me that lookâthe one where he knew exactly what I was thinkingâand then glanced out at the snowy lake. âI was out there yesterday, and the temps are even lower today. You should be fine. Want me to go with you?â
I shook my head. âNo, Iâd like to go alone. I think Iâm ready.â
He simply nodded and then gave me the space I needed.
Methodically, I laced my boots, zipped my coat, and grabbed my hat and gloves on the way out. The air was brisk, the snow the light, shimmery kind that looked like freshly falling glitter as I crossed the lake.
I made my way up over the island to the center, where Colt and Ryan waited.
Iâd never been here alone, never felt like I was ready, like I was strong enough. Maybe I still wasnât, but I was tired of waiting to feel like it. Maybe feeling strong enough came from being strong so often that it was the default.
Words deserted me as I knelt before Coltâs stone, uncaring that the snow immediately melted through my jeans. There were so many things I needed to say to him, but none of them would leave my lips. So I stopped trying and simply bowed my head, letting the tears from my eyes take the words from my heart straight to him.
Finally, my throat produced a sound.
âI would have fought for you. I would have torn down the very stars, Colt. You are loved, not in past tense, but now, every second of every day, and that will never change. I see pieces of you in your sister, little glimpses of your soul shining out from hers. She carries you with her the same way we all do. I miss you so much that some days it feels like I canât carry it all, but then I see her and somehow make it through. You taught me how to do that, you know. When your sister was sick, and it felt like too much, like I couldnât be enough to pull her through, Iâd look at you and realize that I had to be, because no matter what happened with your sister, it would always be you and me, kid. You taught me how to pick myself up and take the first step. I just never realized how badly Iâd need the lesson. But Iâm doing it. For you, and Maisie, and your dad. We should have told you about him soonerâ¦should have done a lot of things, really.â
I lifted my face to the sky and let the snow fall on my skin. My tears blended with the melting snow until the two were one, and my eyes dried.
The air burned my lungs as I drew it deep, freezing out the heavy, tear-clogged feeling I carried with me like a badge of survival.
Needing the break, I walked the few feet over to Ryanâs grave.
âI never said thank you,â I told him, brushing snow off the top of the stone. âFor Beckett, I mean. I donât know how you knew, but you did. And I know you told me the letters were for him, and you told him the letters were for me, but you knew how badly we needed each other. You saved me through Beckett, Ry. You saved Maisie. I found a ring while I was unpacking in our bedroom. He hasnât asked yet, and Iâm hoping he waits a while, but I know heâs my forever, and I only have him because of you. So thank you for Beckett, and for your letter that brought him home to me. Now, kiss my boy, would you?â I pressed a kiss to my fingers and put it over his name. âHeâs only on loan, so be careful with him.â
Then I walked back to Coltâs grave.
âI love you, and I miss you,â I told him. âThereâs nothing truer that I could tell you. And I wish I had been with you, but Iâm so glad you had your dad, and now you have your Uncle Ryan. You were my greatest gift, Colt. And as much as I hate every day that youâre gone, Iâm so thankful for the days I had you. Thank you for being mine.â Then I pressed a kiss to the same fingers and let them trail across his name, all twenty-one letters of it.
COLTON MACKENZIE-GENTRY The walk back across the lake was quiet in a profoundly peaceful way. Iâd done it. Iâd found the strength to put one foot in front of the other and get there. And Iâd continue to do so in every way, because I was strong enough.
A lot of that was due to the man standing at the edge of the lake, waiting for me to come home to him.
âYou okay?â Beckett asked, wrapping me in his arms.
âYeah. I think I will be, at least.â
He brushed my cheeks with his glove-covered hands. âYeah, you will be.â
âDo you ever think about fate?â
His brow puckered. âYou mean the way we lost Colt?â
âYes. No. Kind of. Iâve been so angry with God for taking Ryan, then Colt when weâd just gotten Maisie in the clear, for taking him at all.â
âMe, too.â
âBut then I was looking out at the lake, and I had this thought. Maybe he was always supposed to go. Maybe they both were. If Ryan hadnât died, maybe you would have come to visit, but you wouldnât have stayed. It wasnât in your nature back then.â
Beckett didnât speak, simply gave me a small nod and waited for me to continue.
âBut he did die. And you came. And you saved Maisie with the treatments, and you saved Coltâs heart by being here when I couldnât. You made his every wish come true, and you taught him such incredible things. Because of you, he wasnât lonely. Because of you, he was doubly loved. Iâm realizing that fate would have taken him whether or not youâd been here. Whether or not Ryan had lived, or Maisie had died. But without you, he would have been alone. No one else could have found him, could have given him the peace you did. Without you, I would have buried both of my children.â
His mouth pressed into a line as he struggled to maintain control. âI couldnât save him. I would have given my own life if it meant he could be here with you. Iâve saved every child sinceâ¦â He swallowed and looked away.
âWith every call, youâre trying to repent for a sin you didnât knowingly commit. I see your face every time you find a child.â
âBut I couldnât save yours. Couldnât save my own. How can you forgive me for that?â
âBecause thereâs nothing to forgive.â
The girls laughed as they ran through the snow, heading toward the tree house.
âYou think?â
I took one look at Emma, her smile bright as she helped Maisie up the ladder.
âI know.â Warmth raced through my chest. âMaybe you couldnât save the little boy who was always meant to go, but you saved her by teaching Colt.â I motioned toward Emma.
Beckettâs jaw flexed. âFate, you think?â
âFate,â I answered. âAnd maybe itâs not true for everyone, but it can be my truth. Thatâs enough for me.â
He pressed his chilled lips to my forehead. âI love you. I will always love you.â
I rose on my toes and pressed my lips to his in a gentle kiss. âI love you. Now, forever. All of it.â
Yes, I was capable of immense grief, but I was also capable of infinite love. And I would love my life again. Maybe not today, but one day. Because I wasnât done yet.
Life was short. Colt taught me that.
Life was worth fighting for. Maisie taught me that.
Letters could change your life. Ryan taught me that.
Loveâwhen it was rightâwas enough to save you. Beckett taught me that every single day. And ours was more than enough.
And so was I.