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'I Do' For Revenge-Chapter 261: This is the End
LAYLA’S POV - EPILOGUE/NEW YEAR’S EVE SPECIAL
Five years later, I stood on the terrace of the Duke’s country estate, watching the most beautiful chaos unfold in the gardens below.
"Sarah, wait for me!" a small voice called out.
My daughter, four-year-old Sarah Eleanor O’Brien, was running through the flower beds with her arms spread wide like airplane wings. She had my brunette hair and features, but Axel’s intensity burned in her grey eyes.
"Ash, come on!" Sarah called back to her little brother.
Ashton Robert O’Brien, eighteen months old and pure Axel from his dark hair to his serious eyes, toddled after his sister with determination. He stumbled, caught himself, and kept going with that stubborn O’Brien persistence.
"Careful, darling!" I called out, but Sarah was already helping him up.
"I got him, Mommy!" she announced proudly.
The Duke sat at a small table in the garden, a chessboard set up before him. He moved more slowly now, his cane always within reach, but his mind was as sharp as ever.
He gestured to Sarah, who abandoned her brother to run over.
"Come, great-granddaughter," he said. "Let’s continue our game."
I watched as Sarah climbed into the chair across from him, studying the board.
"Now, remember what I taught you about the knight?" the Duke asked.
"It moves in an L shape!" Sarah said triumphantly, moving her piece.
"Excellent." The Duke countered with his own move. "You know, great-granddaughter, you’re going to be dangerous when you grow up."
Sarah looked up at him with those serious grey eyes. "Like Mommy?"
The Duke laughed, glancing up at me on the terrace. "Exactly like Mommy."
"I’m going to be a CEO too," Sarah announced confidently. "And have meetings and everything."
"I have no doubt," the Duke said warmly.
A car pulled up the drive, and I saw Helena and Tye come out. Helena looked radiant, her engagement ring catching the sunlight as she waved. They’d gotten engaged six months ago, with the wedding planned for next spring.
"Layla!" Helena called up. "We brought dessert!"
"Come on up!"
They joined me on the terrace, Helena immediately wrapping me in a hug.
As COO of Eclipse Beauty now, she ran most of the day-to-day operations while I focused on strategy and product development. The company had flourished under our partnership; we’d gone fully global, with stores in twenty-three countries and a revolutionary new ethical beauty line that had won every industry award.
"How are the kids?" Tye asked, looking down at the garden where Ashton was now trying to climb onto the Duke’s lap.
"Exhausting and perfect," I said with a smile.
"Think we’re ready for kids?" Tye asked Helena, slipping his arm around her waist.
Helena laughed. "Ask me after the wedding."
"That’s what you said about getting engaged," Tye teased.
"And look how that turned out," she countered, kissing his cheek.
I excused myself to check on something inside. The Memory Wall I’d installed last year stretched across one wall of the sitting room was a collection of photos that told our family’s story.
At the top were photos of Robert and Sarah Hammond, Axel’s parents, young and happy. Beside them was a photo of my birth mother, Victoria, the only picture I had of her.
Below those were our wedding photos, both the courthouse ceremony and the real wedding at the estate. Birth announcements for Sarah and Ashton. Family portraits capturing every stage of our growing family.
I heard small footsteps behind me.
"Mommy, who are they?" Sarah asked, pointing at Robert and Sarah Hammond.
Before I could answer, Axel appeared, scooping Sarah up. He had slight silver threading through his dark hair now, tiny lines at the corners of his eyes from smiling. He’d aged beautifully, grown softer in all the ways that mattered.
"Those were my parents. Your grandparents. Their names were Robert and Sarah. You were named after your grandmother."
Sarah’s eyes widened. "Really?"
"Really," Axel said softly. "They would have loved you so much, sweetheart. They would have spoiled you rotten."
"Where are they now?" Sarah asked in that innocent way children have.
"They’re watching from heaven," Axel said. "Every day. They see how amazing you are, how kind you are to your brother, and how smart you’re getting."
"Do they see when I’m naughty too?" Sarah asked suspiciously.
Axel laughed. "Probably. But they love you anyway. That’s what family does."
Sarah hugged him tight, then wriggled down. "I’m going to tell Great-Grandpa Silas that my name is special!"
She ran off, leaving Axel and me alone in front of the wall of memories.
"She’s growing up so fast," I said, leaning into him.
"Too fast," Axel agreed. "Yesterday she was a baby. Now she’s beating the Duke at chess."
"She cheats," I said. "I saw her move her rook when he wasn’t looking."
"She gets that from you," Axel teased.
"Excuse me? I never cheat."
"You cheat at Monopoly all the time."
"That’s called strategic property acquisition."
We laughed, and Axel pulled me close. These small moments, this easy banter, this peace... five years ago, I’d thought it was impossible. Now it was our everyday.
By mid-afternoon, we’d set up a picnic on the estate grounds. The Duke had spread out a blanket in his favourite spot under the old oak tree, with Sarah and Ashton playing nearby while he told them stories about the estate’s history.
"And this tree," the Duke said, pointing up at the branches, "is over three hundred years old. Can you believe that?"
"Wow," Sarah breathed. "That’s older than you, Great-Grandpa!"
Everyone burst out laughing, including the Duke.
"Yes, darling, even older than me," he said, eyes twinkling.
Helena and Tye arrived with an impressive spread of desserts from the best bakery in London. We laid everything out, and someone suggested an impromptu soccer game.
"Teams!" Tye announced. "Me, Helena, and Sarah versus Axel, the Duke, and Layla!"
"I’ll sit this one out," the Duke said, settling comfortably on the blanket with Ashton. "Someone needs to guard the desserts."
What followed was chaotic and hilarious. Sarah took the game incredibly seriously, directing Helena and Tye like a tiny general. Axel and I were laughing too hard to play properly. At one point, Tye picked Sarah up and ran with her toward the goal, both of them giggling.
I retreated to the blanket beside the Duke, watching my family play. This... This was everything I’d never known I wanted.
"You’ve built something beautiful, Layla," the Duke said quietly.
"We all did," I corrected. "This family is all of us together."
Axel jogged over, slightly out of breath; his hair was messy, and his smile was bright. He collapsed onto the blanket beside me.
"I’m too old for this," he declared.
"You’re thirty-seven," I laughed.
"Ancient," he insisted, pulling me close.
The Duke took this as his cue to return to the game, holding Ashton’s hands as they slowly walked toward the others. I watched as everyone adjusted the game to include them, Tye purposely missing the ball so little Ashton could "kick" it. 𝚏𝗿𝗲𝐞𝚠𝕖𝐛𝗻𝗼𝐯𝕖𝚕.𝚌𝗼𝗺
"What are you thinking about?" Axel asked, his voice sounding soft in my ear.
"How far we’ve come," I said honestly. "Five years ago, I was sleeping in a guest room, pregnant and afraid our marriage was broken. And now look at us."
"Any regrets?" he asked.
I turned to look at him. "About us? Not one. About how we started? I’ve made peace with it. We built something real from something broken."
"And that’s because you forgave me," Axel replied.
"I forgave you because you proved every day that you meant your vows," I said, taking his hand. "You chose honesty even when it was hard. You chose us. You’ve never once made me doubt that we’re your priority."
"Always," he said, kissing my forehead.
"Mommy! Daddy!" Sarah came running over, her face flushed with excitement. "Uncle Tye says he’s going to marry Aunt Helena!"
"Sarah!" Helena called, half-laughing, half-exasperated. "I was going to tell them properly!"
"But it’s exciting!" Sarah protested.
Everyone gathered around, hugs and congratulations flowing freely. This was family... messy announcements and impromptu celebrations and joy shared between all of us.
As evening fell and golden hour light painted everything in warm tones, the children were playing tag with Tye while Helena and the Duke discussed wedding venues. Axel and I found ourselves alone for a moment, watching it all.
"Want to know a secret?" Axel asked.
I raised an eyebrow. "We don’t do secrets anymore, remember?"
"This is a good one," he promised. "I booked us a trip... to Paris, just the two of us. Helena and Tye will watch the kids."
"When?" I asked, surprised and touched.
"Next month," he said. "For our five-year anniversary. The real one."
"You remembered."
"I remember everything about us now," Axel said seriously. "The good, the bad, and the redeemed. Every moment that brought us here."
Before I could respond, Helena called out, "Family photo time!"
A photographer I hadn’t noticed arriving was setting up equipment on the terrace. Helena, ever the organiser, had apparently arranged this.
"Come on, everyone!" she directed. "On the terrace!"
We gathered together: the Duke in the centre in his chair, Axel and I on either side with Sarah and Ashton, Helena and Tye completing the circle.
"Everyone say ’family’!" the photographer called.
"Family!" we chorused, and the camera clicked.
I knew without seeing it that this photo would be perfect. Not because we looked perfect, but because we were genuinely happy... together.
This photo would join the others on the Memory Wall, another Chapter in our ongoing story.
—
Later, after the kids were in bed and the guests had left, I stood on the terrace alone, looking up at the stars.
They say some love stories begin in darkness. Ours certainly did: manipulation, revenge, lies... we had it all.
But somewhere in that darkness, we found light; we found truth; we found each other.
Axel stopped being the man seeking revenge and became the man who taught me what real love looks like: patient, honest, and unconditional.
I stopped being the woman running from her past and became the woman who built a future worth living.
Our children would grow up knowing they were wanted, planned for, cherished. They’d never question if they were enough, never wonder if love came with conditions.
The cycle of manipulation and control ended with us. What began instead was a legacy of honesty, love, and choice.
"Mommy!"
I turned to see Sarah at the terrace door in her pyjamas, rubbing her eyes. "What are you doing up, sweetheart?"
"Couldn’t sleep," she said. "Will you come play a game with me?"
I looked back at the stars one more time, then smiled at my daughter.
Some love stories begin in darkness.
I took her hand, and Axel appeared from inside, scooping Sarah up with a laugh.
But ours learned to live in the light.
THE END







