Almost Home
It was the scent of rain on pine trees that first told Elara she was home. As the bus rolled to a stop at the tiny station of Willowridge, her heart pounded against her ribcage with a mix of fear and hope. It had been twelve years since she last set foot here — twelve years since she’d run away from the very things she now found herself yearning for.
The town hadn’t changed much. The same weathered wooden benches lined Main Street, the bakery still had its hand-painted sign, and the lake shimmered under the same wide, endless sky. But the people had changed. Or maybe it was Elara who had changed.
She made her way to her mother’s house, the porch creaking in welcome as she stepped onto it. The door opened before she could knock. “Elara.” The single word was soft, almost broken.
“Hi, Mom.”
In her mother’s arms, she found the warmth she hadn’t realized she’d been missing for so long.
Over the next few days, Elara settled in, rediscovering the rhythm of Willowridge — morning walks by the lake, afternoons spent helping her mom at the old bookstore, and quiet evenings watching the sunset. But it wasn’t long before the past caught up to her.
“Didn’t think I’d see you here again.”
The voice was familiar, low, and steady. She turned slowly, and there he was — Noah Hayes. The boy she’d loved. The man she’d left behind.
Their first conversations were awkward, filled with things unsaid. But the town had a way of pulling people together. A community event led to shared laughter and an unexpected storm to the shared shelter. Slowly, their walls began to crumble.
One evening by the lake, the golden light casting long shadows, Noah finally asked, “Why did you leave?”
Elara looked out over the water, her heart aching with the weight of old regrets. “I was scared. Of staying, of being stuck… of not being enough.”
He was quiet for a moment. “You were always enough. You just didn’t see it.”
As summer stretched on, so did their story. Old wounds began to heal, and new memories blossomed. But when an opportunity arose for Elara to return to the city for a job she’d always dreamed of, she found herself torn between the life she’d built and the love she’d rediscovered.
In the end, the decision wasn’t easy. But it was hers.
When the bus pulled away from Willowridge, Elara’s heart felt both heavy and light. But this time, she knew one thing for certain — no matter where life took her, she’d always have a place to come back to. She’d always be almost home.
Egan to wear thin.
One afternoon, a letter arrived at her apartment — a handwritten note from her mother. Inside was a picture of the lake at sunset and a short message: "Come visit soon. We miss you."
It didn’t take long for Elara to book a ticket back.
Willowridge welcomed her with open arms. At the bookstore, her mother beamed, and the townspeople greeted her like she’d never left. But it was Noah she sought out most.
She found him by the lake, skipping stones across the water. “You came back,” he said, his voice soft with surprise.
“I never really left,” she whispered.
This time, when they sat side by side in the fading light, there were no more walls between them. They talked about everything and nothing, and when the silence stretched long, it was a comfortable kind.
“I don’t know if I can stay,” she admitted after a while. “But I want to try.”
Noah took her hand, his touch warm and steady. “Then we’ll try. Together.”
And just like that, Elara knew — sometimes home isn’t a place. Sometimes it’s a person.
No comments:
Post a Comment