The next morning, James found something he didn’t expect.
Peace.
Not full clarity. Not full resolution. But enough quiet in his chest to breathe without it hurting.
His father was already sitting at the kitchen table again, Bible open this time, not just resting there like yesterday.
Reading.
Slowly.
Carefully.
Like someone relearning a language they once knew by heart.
“You’re up early,” James said.
His father looked up.
“So are you.”
A faint pause.
Then, almost cautiously:
“I used to read this every morning,” his father said.
James leaned against the counter.
“What changed?”
His father didn’t dodge it.
“I let shame become louder than God.”
That honesty didn’t feel rehearsed.
It felt earned.
James nodded once, like he was filing that away somewhere deeper than conversation.
Later that morning, Rebecca returned.
She stood in the doorway for a moment, taking in the scene—father and son sharing space that had once been defined by absence.
“I see things are… still happening,” she said gently.
James gave a half-smile.
“That’s one way to put it.”
She stepped inside.
“There’s something you should know.”
James straightened slightly.
“What now?”
Rebecca hesitated.
“Your father’s condition is more serious than I originally explained.”
Silence settled immediately.
James didn’t look surprised.
Just still.
“How serious?” he asked.
Rebecca lowered her voice.
“Months. Maybe less.”
That word didn’t explode.
It just sank.
Quietly.
Deeply.
His father closed the Bible slowly.
“I told her not to sugarcoat it,” he said.
James turned toward him.
“Why?”
His father looked at him with tired eyes.
“Because I don’t have time for half-truths anymore.”
That landed harder than anything else had so far.
For the rest of the day, something shifted.
Not dramatically.
But noticeably.
James stayed.
Not just physically.
Mentally.
Emotionally.
Present in a way he hadn’t been before.
That afternoon, they walked together outside.
Slow steps.
Careful pacing.
The kind of walk that forces conversation to either surface—or disappear entirely.
“I wasn’t there when you needed me,” his father said.
James didn’t interrupt.
“But I’m here now.”
James looked ahead.
“That’s not how time works.”
“I know.”
A pause.
Then his father added:
“But it’s all I have left to offer.”
That honesty softened something in James—not the wound, but the edges around it.
Meanwhile, in Hope Isles, life kept moving.
June was refilling coffee cups at Sit Awhile.
“You think he’s coming back?” Joe asked.
June didn’t look up.
“I think he already started.”
Joe frowned.
“That’s not an answer.”
June finally smiled.
“It is in Hope Isles.”
At Hope House, Sarah stood in the doorway of James’s room.
It still looked untouched.
Like someone paused mid-life.
Ethan walked up behind her.
“You ever think he won’t come back?” he asked.
Sarah didn’t turn around.
“I try not to.”
Ethan leaned against the wall.
“I’d understand if he didn’t.”
Sarah finally looked at him.
“Would you?”
Ethan hesitated.
“No.”
That honesty surprised even him.
That night, James and his father sat outside on a small porch.
The air was cool.
Quiet.
Comfortable in a way neither of them had experienced together before.
His father spoke first.
“I used to think coming back meant fixing everything.”
James listened.
“I was wrong,” his father continued.
“Coming back just means you stop running.”
That phrase stuck in the air.
Stop running.
James repeated it silently in his mind.
Not aloud.
Not yet.
Inside the house, Rebecca packed her briefcase.
“You’re going to have to decide soon,” she said.
James turned toward her.
“I know.”
She softened slightly.
“I don’t envy you.”
“I don’t either.”
That almost made her smile.
Almost.
Later that night, James stood alone in the backyard.
The sky above him was wide.
Uninterrupted.
Somewhere out there, Hope Isles existed.
A place he once arrived as a stranger.
A place that had slowly rewritten what he thought a life could be.
And now—
it was calling him back in a way he couldn’t ignore.
Not as escape.
Not as comfort.
But as purpose.
He closed his eyes.
And for the first time since arriving here, he prayed without words.
Just silence.
Just surrender.
Just willingness.
When he returned inside, his father was waiting at the table.
“Tomorrow,” his father said quietly.
James looked at him.
“What happens tomorrow?”
His father met his eyes.
“You decide which road you’re really on.”
James didn’t answer.
Because for the first time…
he finally understood the weight of the choice.
Not between two places.
But between two versions of himself.
And somewhere in Hope Isles, a porch light stayed on a little longer than usual.
As if the town itself was waiting.
Not for his arrival.
But for his return.
To Be Continued…
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