At first, the quiet felt unfamiliar—almost suspicious. I would wake in the middle of the night expecting shouting, expecting footsteps, expecting the kind of fear that had once lived in my bones. But nothing came. Just wind against the windows, the steady breathing of my children in the next room, and a stillness I had never trusted before. Healing, I learned, doesn’t arrive like a moment—it settles in slowly, until one day you realize you’re no longer bracing for impact.
I stayed in Montana, not because I was hiding, but because I had finally found space to exist without being watched or controlled. I found work at a small community center, helping women who arrived with the same look I once carried—exhausted, guarded, unsure if safety was real or temporary. I didn’t tell them what to do. I just listened. Because sometimes the most powerful thing you can offer someone isn’t advice—it’s proof that survival can turn into something more.
Marcus and the others never disappeared completely. They would pass through now and then, engines low, presence steady, never asking for thanks or recognition. Ghost always checked on the kids first, quieter than the rest, but somehow the one who noticed everything. They didn’t try to be part of my life—they just made sure I had one. And in a world where so much had been taken from me, that kind of respect felt like its own form of protection.
I don’t think about Diego the same way anymore. Not as a shadow, not as something chasing me. He’s just a part of a past that no longer defines the shape of my days. What matters now is what I’ve built in its place—morning light in a safe home, laughter that doesn’t feel fragile, and children who will grow up knowing love without fear. I used to think survival meant getting away. Now I understand—it means staying, living, and no longer needing to run. READ MORE BELOW