chapter foutheen

1086 Words
The room was quiet except for the soft crackle of the candles and the gentle patter of snow against the windows. Ethan’s tree lights cast a warm, multicolored glow over them both. Emily sat very still on the couch, the open notebook in her lap, tears sliding silently down her cheeks as she stared at the sketch of herself—of Amelia—beside the river in 1862. Ethan waited. He didn’t touch her, didn’t speak. He simply held the space, the way he had learned to hold hope for seventeen long years. Finally she looked up. Her gray-green eyes were wide, shining, but not afraid. “It’s me,” she whispered. “That’s my face. My hair. The way I stand.” Ethan nodded once. She turned the page slowly, reading his reconstructed journal entries—words he had remembered and written down over the years, Elijah’s voice echoing through time. October 17, 1863 She wore the blue dress today, the one her mother made before the fever. Said it brought out the green in her eyes. I told her every dress does that. She laughed and kissed me anyway. December 24, 1863 (reconstructed from the flash) Walking the road home. Snow deep, but heart light. The ring is in my pocket. Going to ask her proper tonight. Captain signed the pass. God is good. Emily’s hand flew to her mouth. A small sob escaped. “I remember the dress,” she said, voice trembling. “I remember waiting. I remember the rider coming on Christmas morning… with your things.” Now the tears came faster. She set the notebook aside and opened the locket at her throat. The tiny gold band glinted inside, nestled against the curl of auburn hair. “You carried this,” she said. “You were bringing it to me.” “Yes.” She reached out suddenly, fingers tracing his jaw—the exact spot where Elijah’s scar had been from a childhood fall. “Here,” she murmured. “You had a scar here. From jumping the creek on a dare.” Ethan’s eyes filled. “You pushed me in afterward for being reckless.” A broken laugh escaped her. “I did.” Then the flood came—not gradual, but all at once. Images poured through her like a river breaking its banks. The riverbank in summer, cicadas screaming, first real kiss under the willows. The barn in autumn, lantern light, his uniform gray and new. The promise: I’ll find you in the next one. Waiting through spring, summer, fall. The rider on Christmas morning. Wearing the locket every day for fifty-five years. Dying in 1918 with his name on her lips. And then—nothing. Darkness. Waiting across lifetimes. Emily gasped, doubling forward, hands pressed to her chest as if the old wound had opened anew. Ethan moved at last, wrapping his arms around her, pulling her close. She clung to him, face buried in his shoulder, sobs shaking them both. “I waited,” she cried into his shirt. “I waited so long.” “I know,” he whispered against her hair. “I’m sorry it took me so long to find you.” They held each other for a long time, rocking gently on the couch while the snow fell outside and the tree lights blinked like slow, patient stars. Eventually the tears slowed. Emily pulled back just enough to look at him. Her face was blotched, eyes swollen, but radiant. “Elijah,” she said again, testing the name, claiming it. “Amelia,” he answered, voice thick. Then, softer: “Emily.” She smiled through the tears—a real smile, wide and wondering. “Both,” she said. “I’m both.” He brushed a thumb across her wet cheek. “And I’m both. Ethan and Elijah. Here. Now. With you.” She leaned forward slowly, deliberately, and kissed him. It was not their first kiss—not by a century and a half—but it felt like coming home after the longest journey. Soft at first, then deeper, tasting of salt tears and cocoa and seventeen years of longing finally ended. When they parted, foreheads resting together, Emily laughed once—shaky, joyful. “You found me on the very first knock,” she said. “Fate has a sense of humor,” he answered. They sat intertwined on the couch, hands linked, sharing memories as they returned. The blackberry summers. The barn dances they never got to attend together. The letters that stopped coming. The gold ring he never got to place on her finger. The locket she never removed. Hours passed. The candles burned low. Snow piled deep outside. At some point Emily stood, pulled him up with her. “Come,” she said. They walked to his front window. The street was silent, blanketed white, holiday lights glowing softly through the storm. “It’s the same snow,” she whispered. “The snow from that night.” He wrapped his arms around her from behind, chin resting on her head. “Not the same,” he said. “This one brought me home safe.” She turned in his arms, reached up, and unclasped the locket. Carefully she removed the small gold band, held it between them. “Will you do it properly now?” she asked. Ethan’s throat tightened. He took the ring—worn thin by time, but perfect. He dropped to one knee on the rug, snow light reflecting through the window onto them both. “Amelia Rose Whitaker,” he said, voice steady despite everything, “I promised you forever beside a river in 1862. I’ve crossed lifetimes to keep that promise. Will you marry me—again, for the first time in this life?” Tears filled her eyes anew, but she was smiling wider than ever. “Yes,” she said. “A thousand times yes.” He slipped the ring onto her finger. It fit perfectly, as if it had waited all these years for her hand alone. They kissed again under the tree lights, snow falling witness outside. Midnight came and went unnoticed. Christmas morning dawned while they talked and remembered and planned—quietly, reverently—the life they would finally share. The promise was kept. The wait was over. And in the soft light of a new Christmas Day, two souls—once torn apart by war and time—became whole again.
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