When I got back to the cabin, Jack was waiting on the porch. He looked at me the way only another veteran can look, reading tension in posture, in clenched fists, in eyes that won’t rest.
“You saw them,” he said, not even asking.
I nodded.
“They’re not backing down.”
He tossed me a beer.
“Neither are you.”
We sat in silence, sipping. Finally, I said, “Funny thing about combat zones, you expect the enemy. Family’s different. Hits harder.”
Jack nodded slowly.
“That’s because in combat, you know where the line is. With family, the line keeps moving.”
The beer was cold, the air colder, but I felt a fire inside me that no weather could put out. Megan wanted to push. Mom wanted me silent. But I’d been trained for worse.
Before turning in that night, I walked down to the dock. The lake reflected the moon, calm and steady. I thought of Dad, his trust, his letter, his warning. I whispered into the night, “I won’t let them take this from me.”
And in that moment, I believed it.
The next morning, I rolled up my sleeves and decided the cabin wasn’t going to look like a forgotten relic anymore. If Megan wanted to treat it like trash, I’d turn it into something worth fighting for.