Jenna visited more often. Not out of obligation now, but because she wanted to. She brought work calls with her and city shoes and half-finished thoughts about leaving her firm and doing something that made more sense of the years ahead. I did not push. Reinvention cannot be assigned like homework. But I watched her ride Midnight across the eastern meadow one warm April morning and thought that perhaps Joshua’s inheritance had reached her too, not in the form of control, but permission.
As for me, I painted.
Not every day well. Not every week bravely. But steadily. The large canvas for the great room took shape over months. The farm in layered time, present, past, possibility. The broken property beneath the restored one. The old childhood wound beneath the sanctuary. Riders crossing all three planes at once, not portraits exactly, but echoes. Joshua and me. Jenna behind, not following but emerging. Horses not merely as animals, but as motion between versions of a life.
When Ellis helped me hang the finished piece in the great room, he stood with hands on hips and considered it in silence.
“That’s all of it,” he said finally.
I looked at him. “All of what?”