My phone buzzed on the table. Megan, of course. I didn’t answer, but the text lit up the screen.

How’s the shack, Hannah? Still smell like mold?

I stared at it and almost laughed. If only she knew.

The night wore on as I went through the box. Land deeds, bank statements, Dad’s notes. The deeper I dug, the clearer it became. This wasn’t just property. It was leverage. It was power. And I was the one holding it.

By midnight, I finally ate the stew. It was damn good. Marine good.

I sat there at the table staring at the documents, the ring of Rose glinting in one of the photos, and thought about what Megan would say if she knew. She’d call me unworthy. She’d try to take it. And for the first time all week, I felt a spark of something I hadn’t felt since leaving Afghanistan: anticipation before a fight.

I cleaned up, stacked the papers neatly, and locked the box back under the floorboard. Then I stretched out on the couch, listening to the quiet of the woods outside. No sirens, no hum of city traffic, just the creek of the cabin settling into the night.