We recovered the grandmother’s condo for Kate, and I kept the clinic. The big house in Pine Hollow was auctioned to cover debts. Three years have passed. We bought a small lakefront property in a quiet county—humble, light-filled, and ours. We drink tea from a battered kettle Victor gave us. Susan is family now—she bakes the pies.
Kate paints every day on a small deck that looks over the water. Her work is darker than before but full of strength. She opened a small studio offering art therapy to women recovering from abusive relationships. She’s changed: there’s a firmness in her that wasn’t there before. One evening she called me over, put her head on my shoulder, and quietly said thank you—for not leaving and for helping her find her way out.
I kissed her head, and told her being a mother isn’t always about soft comforts. Sometimes it’s being willing to dig someone out, to get dirty and fight. The sun set over the lake. Michael sits in a state prison; we sit together on a porch that smells of cedar and hope. The lesson I’ve learned is simple: there’s almost always a way out, even when it seems there isn’t. It might start with a phone call, a neighbor’s warning, or a friend who keeps a promise—and sometimes it ends with justice.
