Chapter 123 From Conflict To Quiet
Harper's POV,
The text came on a Wednesday afternoon between patients.
I almost missed it. I was reviewing notes from my morning session, half a sandwich on my desk going stale, the particular focused tunnel of a busy clinic day.
My phone lit up on the corner of the desk and I glanced at it automatically the way you do when you're not really looking.
Then I looked properly.
Unknown number. But the message made the sender immediately clear.
\[It's Brianna. I know this is out of nowhere. I just wanted to reach out. I hope that's okay.\]
I sat back in my chair.
Of all the things I'd expected from a Wednesday afternoon, this wasn't one of them. I hadn't heard from Brianna since the Vancouver General hospital visit when she'd been frightened and alone and almost eight months pregnant. That felt like a different chapter of a story I'd mostly closed.
I stared at the message for a moment.
Then typed back: \[It's okay. How are you?\]
The response came quickly, like she'd been holding her phone waiting.
\[Really well actually. Better than I expected to be, honestly. My daughter just started walking.\]
I smiled before I could stop myself.
\[What's her name?\] I typed.
\[Ellie. Eleanor officially but she already has opinions about everything so Ellie suits her better.\]
I thought about a small person with strong opinions and felt an unexpected warmth toward someone I'd never met.
\[She sounds like Rose,\] I wrote back.
\[Ha. Maybe they'd get along. Or destroy everything in a ten mile radius together.\]
\[Definitely the second one.\]
She paused for a while before typing back:
\[I got a job. Communications coordinator at a nonprofit downtown. It's not glamorous but I like it. I like having somewhere to be. Something that's mine.\]
I read that twice.
“Something that's mine.”
I remembered the Brianna I'd met at Joel's apartment — polished and smug and wrapped entirely in someone else's identity. The Brianna who'd cornered me in a hotel bathroom. The one who'd sent me a vicious text from a hospital bed trying to make me feel responsible for her choices.
And then the Brianna who'd called me from her mother's house, scared and lost, asking how to stop waiting for permission to live her own life.
\[I'm glad,\] I typed. And meant it.
\[How's Crew? I saw the Canucks coaching roster. That's a big change.\]
\[He loves it,\] I wrote. \[Took some adjusting but he's exactly where he's supposed to be.\]
\[Good.\] Then: \[Harper… I never properly apologized. For everything. The lawsuit, the things I said, all of it. I was awful to you and you still showed up at the hospital when I called. You didn't have to do that.\]
I looked at the message for a long moment.
The lawsuit. The criminal charges. The months of fear and legal bills and uncertainty that had followed me through some of the most important chapters of my life. All of it connected back to Brianna and her father and Joel and the whole complicated machine of people protecting their own interests at my expense.
I could still feel the edges of it if I pressed on them.
But pressing on old wounds wasn't something I had much interest in anymore.
\[You were scared and in over your head,\] I typed back. \[So was I. But we both survived it.\]
\[You're very gracious.\]
\[I've had practice.\]
Another pause, longer this time.
\[Joel has supervised visits on Saturdays,\] she wrote finally. \[Ellie calls him daddy but she doesn't really understand yet. I think that's the hardest part. Watching her love someone unconditionally who I know will eventually disappoint her.\]
I didn't know what to say to that so I said the only true thing.
\[You'll be there when he does. That's what matters.\]
\[Yeah.\] A beat. \[Yeah, I think you're right.\]
\[Take care of yourself Brianna. And Ellie.\]
\[You too. Give Rose a squeeze from someone she doesn't know.\]
I laughed out loud at my desk, alone in my office with my stale sandwich and my afternoon patients waiting.
\[I will,\] I wrote.
I put my phone down and sat for a moment in the quiet of my office.
There was no dramatic resolution in that exchange. No catharsis, no tearful reconciliation, no moment where the past rearranged itself into something cleaner than it actually was. Just two women who'd been on opposite sides of something ugly, checking in across the distance, finding that the distance had grown large enough to breathe in.
That felt like enough.
More than enough, actually.
…….
That evening I showed Crew the messages while Rose redistributed her dinner between her bowl, his plate, and the floor.
He read through them without speaking.
When he looked up his expression was thoughtful rather than guarded, which was how it used to look whenever Brianna came up. The guardedness had taken a long time to leave. I'd watched it go gradually, the way tension leaves a room when a window opens.
“Ellie,” he said. “That's a good name.”
“Eleanor officially.”
“So she already has opinions about everything,” he read from the screen. He glanced at Rose who was currently attempting to feed pasta to her own reflection in the window. “Sounds familiar.”
“I thought the same thing.”
He handed my phone back.
“You okay?” he asked.
I thought about it honestly rather than reaching for the automatic answer.
“Yeah,” I said. “Actually yeah. It just felt… finished. Like the last loose thread finally tied itself off.”
He nodded slowly.
“She did the work,” he said. “That matters.”
“It does.”
Rose abandoned her reflection and turned back to her bowl with renewed purpose, apparently having resolved whatever she'd been discussing with herself.
We watched her for a moment in comfortable silence.
“Ellie and Rose,” Crew said quietly, more to himself than to me.
“Don't,” I said.
“I'm not doing anything.”
“You're imagining them meeting.”
“I'm absolutely not.”
“Crew.”
“I'm just saying they'd either be best friends or—”
“Destroy everything in a ten mile radius,” I finished.
He looked at me. “You already thought about it.”
“Brianna said the same thing.”
He smiled — slow and genuine — and reached across the table and took my hand briefly before Rose demanded his attention back with the focused urgency she brought to all her requests.
The evening continued the way evenings did. Bath time, the chase down the hallway, the negotiation over pajamas, the story that Rose demanded twice and then fell asleep halfway through the second telling.
Afterward, Crew and I sat on the balcony in the cool night air, Vancouver spread out below us, and didn't need to talk about Brianna or Joel or any of it anymore.
Some things resolve quietly.
Not with a bang or a declaration or a dramatic final scene.
Just a Wednesday text and a stale sandwich and the understanding that the people who hurt you are out there somewhere living their lives and that's… fine. That's actually fine.
The city hummed below us.
We stayed until it got too cold and then went inside to our ordinary extraordinary life.