Page 38
ROLLO
A week had passed since the forest sighed back to life, and Celestial Pines finally felt like itself again.
The air didn’t taste like copper and ash anymore. Birds sang more often than they didn’t. And the townsfolk? They smiled like they meant it now—like the weight that had pressed down on their shoulders for months had finally slipped free.
Even the Whispering Woods had gone soft around the edges, humming instead of groaning, offering gentle breezes instead of warnings.
But Rollo hadn’t relaxed in days. Because today—hell, maybe this moment —was the one he’d been turning over in his mind since the night Delilah saved his life… again.
He stood outside The Spellbound Sip, one hand fiddling with the edge of his flannel sleeve, the other holding the smallest box he’d ever carried that somehow weighed more than a bear trap.
The ring inside wasn’t flashy. Gods knew Delilah would’ve handed it back if it sparkled too hard. No, it was simple. Gold kissed with forest iron, forged by hand, with a single crescent rune carved on the inside. The one she’d drawn on the ritual bowl to represent them in the forest.
He tucked it back in his pocket and took a breath.
The little bell above the door chimed when he pushed inside.
It smelled like lemon mist and roasted almonds. A cozy mix of sweetness and something tart—just like her.
Delilah sat near the back window, sunlight catching in her chestnut hair. She wore her usual—soft cotton sleeves pushed to her elbows, a smudge of something herb-stained on her cheek. She looked like home.
Rollo didn’t smile. Not yet. He couldn’t. His jaw was tight, his palms sweating. And he hated how his heart kept trying to knock its way out of his chest like it had something to prove.
“Hey, bear,” she said, without looking up from her tea. “You’re late.”
He scratched the back of his neck. “I was… uh. Thinkin’.”
She raised an eyebrow, teasing. “Dangerous habit.”
He crossed to her slowly, boots silent on the old wooden floor, and took the seat across from her. “Got a minute?”
“For you? Always.”
Nerissa, the siren-barista, passed by with a wink and a fresh pot of tea. Rollo murmured a thank you, then held up a hand when she reached for their cups.
“I got this part,” he said, his voice gruff but soft.
Delilah blinked. “You’re making the tea?”
He nodded.
“Since when do you?—”
He didn’t answer. Just reached into his coat pocket and pulled out a small bundle of herbs tied in twine. Cinnamon bark, dried lemon balm, and one perfect lemon mist blossom. Carefully, he dropped them into her cup, letting them steep. The air shifted, warm and citrusy.
She leaned in, eyes narrowing. “What are you up to?”
He looked at her hands wrapped around the mug, and then up into her hazel eyes.
“I ain’t good with speeches,” he started, voice low. “Words never came easy. But you… you always made ‘em feel worth sayin’.”
She didn’t interrupt.
“I spent most of my life thinkin’ I had to be hard. That protectin’ folks meant standin’ between them and hurt, even if it meant lettin’ it hit me instead. Even if it meant pushin’ people away.”
He swallowed hard.
“But then you came back. And I remembered that protection isn’t just fighting.”
Her hand twitched around the cup.
“It’s holdin’. Standing beside. Taking the weight with someone, not from them.”
He reached into his coat again, pulled out the cinnamon bark she hadn’t noticed before—cracked down the center.
Inside, nestled in the curl of spice, was the ring.
Delilah gasped, hand flying to her mouth.
Rollo’s fingers were trembling when he picked it up, but he dropped to one knee anyway. Right there in The Spellbound Sip. Next to the table where they’d shared arguments, kisses, awkward silences, and that very first cinnamon-laced truce.
“I love you,” he said, raw and ragged. “Not just because we’re fated. Not because the forest says so. But because you see me—even the parts I still try to hide. You see them, and you stay.”
Delilah’s eyes brimmed, tears tracking slowly down her cheeks.
“So,” Rollo said, clearing his throat. “What do you say? Would you be willing to marry an old bear like me?”
She didn’t say anything.
Not at first. She laughed.
Bright and sudden and beautiful. Her whole body leaned back as it bubbled out of her, light and full of every good thing in the world.
Rollo blinked, stunned. “Is that a—bad reaction?”
She grabbed his shirt, hauled him up into a kiss so fierce it nearly knocked his balance. Then she whispered against his lips, “That’s a yes , you stubborn bear.”
Cheers erupted from somewhere behind them. Apparently, Nerissa had lingered just long enough to eavesdrop.
Rollo didn’t care.
He pressed his forehead to Delilah’s, both of them breathless and grinning like fools.
“You’re mine now,” he murmured.
Delilah snorted. “I’ve been yours since the moment you growled at me in that moonvine garden.”
He slipped the ring onto her finger, slow and sure.
It fit.
The tea sat untouched, the lemon mist curling like a blessing into the air.
And outside, the sun burned gold over a town that had been broken and healed—just like them.
Table of Contents
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- Page 38 (Reading here)
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