That afternoon, Jude walked with Lucy to prune saplings. She paused, staring at the black-cloth water bowl beneath the fig-glyph tree. "What now?" she asked.
He smiled. "We live. And tomorrow, we do it again."
She nodded, touched a leaf. "I like tomorrow."
Jude kissed her cheek, brushing her hair back. "Me too."
They gathered again at dusk to watch watchers drift over orchard. Grace and Jude stood together, each carrying flowers on their backs. The wives sat in a loose circle, children in laps. The watchers glimmered: silver, blue, gold. Their presence was gentle, supportive, like partners in a shared dream.
Jude spoke softly: "They're here for the story. Ours. The island's. Not gods. Not masters. Just memory."
Grace squeezed his hand. "They chose us."
He looked at the wives. "Then tonight we hold what they brought, and we pass it forward."