
The road bent beneath oaks draped in Spanish moss, their branches heavy with time. The wheels of the carriage crunched over gravel, and in that sound I felt the centuries collapse. I was not only myself — I was the man I had been. A general in gray, a son of the South, commander of men who marched into fire and never returned.
Beside me sat the Queen, her presence unearthly yet perfectly at home in the humid air. Her pale hair caught the lantern light, glowing against the night as though the world itself had bent to announce her. I wanted her to see it all — the columns, the fields, the porch where I once laid down my saber and told myself the war would never end.
The plantation house rose out of the dark like a memory too heavy to dissolve. Whitewashed walls, high windows, the scent of magnolia mixing with the faint char of a past long buried. I had walked those halls before. My boots had echoed on those wooden floors, my hand had gripped that banister polished by generations.
And there — waiting at the foot of the stairs, her eyes wide with the wonder of a child — stood Ishy Belle. My little girl. Not imagined, not conjured, but remembered. Her dress simple, her hair a tumble of curls, her smile too bright for the shadows history cast around us.
I took the Queen’s hand in mine, led her forward.
“This was my house,” I told her, voice low, heavy. “My war. My grave. But she —” I nodded toward Ishy Belle, who ran to me with laughter, her small arms wrapping around my waist — “she was my salvation.”
The Queen knelt, radiant in the candlelight, and Ishy Belle studied her with solemn eyes. For a moment, the centuries fell away, and we were simply a family. No banners, no guns, no reckonings. Just a father, his daughter, and the Queen who had followed me across lifetimes to see the truth of who I was.
And as the night deepened, the house did not feel like ruin. It felt alive, reborn. Not the echo of a South lost to war, but the beginning of a story we carried forward together.
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