Page 38 of Lennox's Tale

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“Had work to do,” I said, setting the tray down — two mugs, a plate of biscuits with jam, and a single white rose I’d picked from the garden out front.

She smiled, sitting up, the quilt slipping down her shoulders. “You made breakfast?”

“Ipreparedbreakfast,” I said. “But the rose is real.”

She laughed — that low, unguarded sound that always found its way straight through me. I sat across from her, heart steady and full, still half in disbelief that this woman chose me to be hers.

“Before we eat,” I said quietly, “there’s something I need to tell you.”

Her smile faded into curiosity. “You’re scaring me, Lennox.”

I shook my head, voice low. “No, baby. Not this time.”

I reached into my pocket and pulled out a small velvet box — deep burgundy, worn at the edges, the kind of softness time couldn’t take. Her hand flew to her mouth when she saw it.

“Lennox…”

I opened it. The gold caught the light — brushed, warm, humble. Three small diamonds nestled like stars in a quiet sky. My mother’s ring.

“My father gave it to me before I left,” I said. “Said she’d want it to find its way home again. He kept it all this time, waiting until he thought I’d become the man she believed I could be.”

Her big brown eyes shined wet, her lips parting like she was trying to catch her breath. The sight of her like that — moved, trembling, still — nearly undid me.

I took her hand, my thumb tracing the inside of her wrist. “You already know I’m not perfect. I’ve stumbled through ambition, pride, fear — all of it. I used to think love had to be earned, proved, performed. But then I met you, and all you ever asked of me was truth. You saw me before I even recognized myself.”

My throat tightened. I had to swallow before I could go on. “This cottage, this land… it once belonged to people who worked for someone else’s dream. But it was reclaimed, restored. That’s what this love feels like. Restoration. Grace finding its way back.”

The air between us was thick with everything unspoken, with everything we’d survived. “I don’t want to build a life beside you anymore, Naima. I want to build it with you.”

Her tears came fast — soft and quiet, like surrender. I lifted the ring, my hand steady now. “Naima Rhodes — my love, my peace, my home — will you marry me?”

Her nod was trembling, sure. “Yes,” she whispered. “God, yes.”

The sound of it broke something open inside me. Relief. Joy. The ache of finding what you didn’t know you’d been reaching for all along. I slipped the ring onto her finger, and it slid on like it had been waiting — like it remembered where it belonged.

When I kissed her, it wasn’t hunger — it was reverence. Gratitude. A prayer whispered into the morning light.

We stayed like that, folded into each other, the rest of the world soft around us — coffee cooling, biscuits forgotten, the rose catching the sun as if it knew it had just witnessed something holy.

Later, when we finally came up for air, she traced the ring with her thumb. “It’s beautiful,” she murmured. “Feels like history.”

“It is,” I said. “But now it’s ours.”

She smiled through her tears. “Your father…”

I nodded. “He didn’t send a test this time. He sent a blessing.”

We took our coffee to the porch as the world woke—sunlight climbing through the trees, the smell of pine sharp and sweet. She leaned into me, head on my shoulder, our hands intertwined, the ring catching the light.

We talked about what was next—expanding the retreat, creating scholarships, maybe even a second property one day. We talked about family, the idea of it—not in haste, just hope.

She spoke of legacy the way she always did, like it was something alive, something breathing through the hands that built it. And as she spoke, I found myself thinking of my mother—how her love must’ve been this same kind of quiet, constant thing. How maybe, somewhere beyond all this, she could see us now.

I could almost hear her voice in the rustle of the pines, low and knowing…You’ve found your way, baby.

For the first time in years, I didn’t feel the old ache of her absence. I felt her here—in the sunlight brushing Naima’s hair, in the warmth that lingered even after the breeze passed.

When it was time to go, we packed slow, like we were folding time itself. Before we left, I watched Naima sit at the small desknear the window, her hand sure as she wrote a note for whoever came after us.