: Epilogue
Wildfire (Maple Hills 2)
Nine-ish Years Later
âI THINK IâM GOING TO be sick.â Aurora holds her stomach, groaning dramatically. I drape my arm across her shoulders, tugging her closer until I can kiss the top of her head. Iâve spent the last six weeks reassuring her, and now Iâm just giving her affection because she doesnât listen to me anyway. âThis was a horrible idea. Why did you let me do this?â
âWhat happened to âAurora Callaghan doesnât have bad ideasâ and âWhen have I ever been wrong?â orââ
âOkay, okay,â she says. âYouâve made your point.â Aurora moves in front of me, leaning back against my chest, as we both stare up at the Happy Ending sign above the bookstore door. âWhat if nobody wants to buy books from me because Iâm not a family business?â
âWe are a family business. Iâll write it on the window with a Sharpie if you want me to.â
âIâm not sure you, me, and the animals count as a family business.â
Pressing my lips to her neck, I drown in the sweet smell of her perfume. I hate how hard her pulse is hammering. Nervous Rory is the version of my wife I see the least, but buying the old bookstore in Meadow Springs has given her lots of things to be nervous about.
âI feel like that type of claim is going to land us in front of the Committee of Commitments to Town Improvements and Other Important Announcements.â
âMrs. Brown has been dying to get us back there after she lost the name-change vote,â I reply.
Apparently, Happy Ending sounds like an erotic massage parlor, and will only invite misfits and deviants to the town. I wanted to argue that a misfit and a deviant bought the store, but Jenna stressed that the MSCCTIOIA was not a place for jokes.
When Jenna took over Honey Acres from her mom two years ago, the committee of chaos and nonsense demanded she do a business presentation, despite the fact theyâve known her since she was born and sheâs been on the committee for the last fifteen years. She made a few jokes about said history to lighten the mood, which, surprisingly, did quite the opposite.
Rory sighs heavily. âI do plan to promote sin; she wasnât totally wrong.â
âWait until she hears about the hot tub delivery,â I say, gently pushing her in the direction of her new business.
Moving to Meadow Springs wasnât a difficult decision; itâs always been special to us, especially after working three summers at Honey Acres together. What can I say? It really is like a great tea-cozy museum.
Aurora was tired of her job in the sales team at a small publishing house, and desperate to get out of the city. Then I received a promotion at the engineering firm I work for, and the new remote role only requires me to travel a couple of times a month, so we started packing our boxes to start our new life.
After Jenna sold us the land and haunted house where we had our first date, we spent the last eighteen months turning it into our dream home. The amount of land has given Aurora big ideas for all the animals we can now rescue.
Even though I said no to getting a puppy when Aurora told me Fish was having another litterâin my defense, we were fresh out of collegeâI came home from a work trip one day and found not one, but two golden balls of fur in my living room, appropriately named Tuna and Flounder. She immediately blamed Anastasia, who had apparently talked her into it, after getting their sibling, Bunny.
Since then Iâve said no to but still ended up owning: Neville, a rescue border collie with a penchant for daytime television; Mary-Kate and Ashley, two black cats that, even though itâs been three years since we rescued them, I still cannot tell apart; and our latest adoption, Beryl, a pig that canât decide if sheâs a dog or a cat, but definitely believes sheâs not a pig.
Aurora really wanted them all here today for the opening of her bookstore, but I suggested that unleashing three dogs, two cats, and a pig onto her new neighbors maybe wasnât the best idea. She countered that they behaved at our wedding, to which I argued that Iâm not sure Jenna officiating on our back deck while Emilia sipped on a margarita can be considered a wedding. Thankfully, I won that argument.
The bell jingles above our heads as we walk through the freshly painted door, and the store that was once dark and musty is now bright and revived. âI know Iâve said it a million times, but your dad really knocked it outta the park with these,â she says, trailing her hand across the new wooden bookshelves.
I nod, humming in agreement. Dad has worked nonstop for weeks to make sure this entire place looks exactly how Rory wants it. He drew her sketch upon sketch, produced sample upon sample, and at one point, Iâm pretty sure they made a digital vision board together.
It was strange living with him on the weekdays he was here working, especially since I havenât lived with him since I was a freshman. Heâd offered to stay in a local B and B, but Aurora was insistent that he stay with us. I was nervous at first, unsure how things would be despite our relationship being so much better than it was all those years ago. I think the weirdest part for me was starting to miss him on the weekends when heâd go back to Maple Hills.
We said he didnât need to leave, and Mom could come to us, but heâs a sponsor now at Gamblers Anonymous, so he likes to be local in case any of the people heâs helping work through their addiction need his support.
I think Rory needed a father figure to help her, too, given her own fatherâs absence. I overheard Dad reassuring her more times than I can count while he stayed with us. My parents both love my wife, so much so that I only got yelled at once for our spontaneous, guestless wedding. They were just happy she was finally officially their daughter.
Auroraâs heels click against the hardwood floor as she paces up and down the aisles in search of something to panic about. I follow her, strolling slowly with my hands in my pockets, listening to her huff and puff her way around what is a perfect bookstore.
âSweetheartâ¦â
âDonât sweetheart me,â she grumbles, spinning to face me. She plants her hands on her hips and pouts. âYou did this, Russ Callaghan. You told me I could run my own business. A bookstore, no less. Not even a bar or a strip club or something I might actually be good aââ
Whatever she was about to say dies when I close the space between us, taking her face in my hands and pressing my mouth against hers. Her body melts into me, the tension dissipating with every passing second. Moving my hands to cup the nape of her neck, I rest my forehead against hers. âYou are the most capable woman I have ever met in my life. Thereâs nothing you could suggest that I wouldnât support. I will be there to hold your hand through all of it, Ror, but you donât need me to. Youâve never needed me to be incredible. You. Just. Are. And I love you more than I can put into words.â
âI love you, too.â Her arms wrap around my neck, her big green eyes staring into mine. âThis is our last chance alone all weekend. Tell me a secret, Callaghan.â
Secrets arenât really a thing between us. Iâve spent so many years with Aurora that her ability to overshare has finally rubbed off a little. âI did eat your Cheetos last week. It wasnât Neville. He looked at me with such judgment when I blamed him that I felt guilty for, like, three days.â
Those eyes I love so much roll extra-dramatically. âNo shit. You had orange dust all over your face. Try again.â
Itâs the try again that throws me. Like sheâs waiting for me to admit something specific, something she already knows, which isnât how this game works. Our friends and neighbors will be arriving soon for the opening, but sheâs still staring up at me expectantly.
And thatâs when I realize.
She knows.
âOh shit.â The corner of her mouth tugs up into a smirk. âI invited your mom and forgot to tell you.â
âOh shit is right, because yes, you did.â
âHow did you know?â
âBecause she called me to confirm Iâd be serving good champagne.â
âI THOUGHT IâD ESCAPED BEING forced into bookstores with Aurora,â Henry sighs, eyes scanning the tall mahogany shelves lined with new books. âAnd yet here I am. Again.â
Aurora wanted the kidsâ corner painted like the northern lights, so she enlisted her favoriteâand possibly the only person she knows who can do itâartist to help her. The painting he was good with. It was helping make the hundreds of tiny origami stars to hang from the ceiling that got him.
âHere we both are.â I nudge his shoulder with mine playfully. âThanks for bringing those signed editions, man. Aurora appreciates you being here. We both do.â
âItâs fine; it means less books in my house. Sheâd have come, but itâs just a bit far with the baby andââ
âWhat about me?â
We both look at the child perched on Henryâs hip, clinging to him like heâs her favorite toyâwhich he pretty much is. âYes, Mila. Weâre very happy youâre here, too.â
She smiles brightly, which reminds me the older she gets, the more itâs like staring at Stassie. âUncle Henry, can I have my ice cream now? Itâs been the mandatory five minutes.â
Henry drops her to her feet and nudges her away. âGo ask your dad for money.â
âMandatory five minutes?â I ask as we watch her crash into Nateâs legs, shouting her request up to him. Nate pauses his conversation with Emilia, sighing as he reaches for his wallet, scowling at Henry from across the room as he places some bills in his daughterâs palm.
âMandatory five minutes of socializing,â Henry says.
I smother a laugh with my coffee and Mila comes barreling back toward us. âHe said I have to get the twins some, too, but theyâre taking a nap, so I donât think they need any and we should get extra for us.â
âThat sounds reasonable. Come on, kiddo.â She reaches up to take Henryâs hand and the pair of them head in the direction of the ice cream shop, The Little Moo, leaving me to fend for myself. I still donât love being the center of attention, and Iâm thankful today is about Aurora. A mixture of customers and friends are scattered around the room, each scanning the shelves, chatting with each other. I can see JJ and Alex talking to my parents, Stassie rocking a double stroller as she talks to Jenna, Mrs. Brown intensely inspecting the romance section. What was an old, forgotten bookstore not that long ago now feels full of life.
I know my mother-in-law is in here somewhere, so Iâm avoiding our inevitable meeting for as long as possible by keeping myself busy, taking candid photographs of everyone like Aurora taught me. Thatâs when I take the best one: Aurora, behind the cash register with the biggest smile on her face, selling a huge pile of books to someone. The light pouring in through the windows is making her practically glow. Iâm immediately overwhelmed by her beauty, and the feeling of pride that she did all of this herself.
She spots me watching her while her customer looks down, patting around their body to find their wallet. I mouth âI love youâ and she mouths it back. I mouth âIâm so proud of you,â and she mouths back something that looks like âIâm proud of how hot you are.â Itâs the moment that all the moving, all the renovations, all the working in my boxers because I couldnât find the box with our clothes feels totally worth it. Everything brought us here, to being this blissfully happy.
After another hour, I realize that I wonât be able to work from the store like I was planning to. Iâll get absolutely no work done if Iâm staring at my wife all day. Rory is a natural, like I knew she would be, and every customer makes her relax a bit more.
When the opening party starts to wind down and she steps away from behind the register, someone, likely JJ, shouts, âSpeech!â We all watch in awe as she accepts a glass of champagne and throws it back quickly. Sarah tuts disapprovingly, but Aurora is an expert at not listening to her momâs complaints. âItâs for courage.â She laughs. âUmâ¦â
I make my way through the people who have gathered around her so she can see me front and center. Her shoulders relax, and her eyes lock on me.
âThank you everyone for being here today. Really, thank you. I canât believe it. I know a lot of you have traveled a long way, and Iâve promised those of you staying with us pancakes in the morning, and this is my way of telling you that Iâm really terrible at making pancakes.â She really is. âThank you to the people of Meadow Springs for welcoming us into your community. I know it wasnât easy at first, but Russ and I feel so at home here. For everyone else who might not know, many years ago, I made a joke about opening a strip club here. Apparently nobody forgot.â
Everyone in the room laughs, and out of the corner of my eye I spot Mrs. Brown muttering something to John from one of the bowling stores. âThank you to everyone who helped get the store ready. My wonderful father-in-law for spending all his time making sure things were perfect; my friends for helping get rid of that awful magnolia color, and for helping to make hundreds of tiny stars. Thanks to my mom for sending me carefully curated lists of books I should buy.
âGod, this is turning into an Oscar speech. Iâll wrap it up. Itâs no secret that I love books. I love stories about people I donât know, and places I havenât been to. Iâve lived a thousand lives between a thousand pages, but no story, no life, no page has ever made me as happy as you do, Russ Callaghan.â Everyone awws, and I feel the tips of my ears turn pink. âBefore I met you, I hadnât considered what my happy ending might look like. I wasnât sure Iâd get one. Youâre my happy ending, Russ. I fell in love with you in Meadow Springs, and watching you help build our life here has made me fall in love with you a million more times. Thank you for giving me a life that feels too good to be true. Thank you for letting me bring home animals even when you say no. Thank you for letting me live my dreams every day.â
I want to rush over there and kiss her until her lips turn pink, but this is her job now and I donât want to embarrass her. Instead, I raise my glass in her direction. âTo happy endings.â
She raises her glass. âAnd unlimited pets.â
âNo,â I immediately respond, but itâs too late.
âTo happy endings and unlimited pets,â the room echoes.