
Last Moments with Holden
Chapter 3
The winding mountain road stretched endlessly ahead, each curve bringing us higher into the thin air that seemed to press against my lungs like a gentle warning. Holden gripped the steering wheel with white knuckles, his face pale in the dashboard's glow.
"Pull over," I whispered, pressing my hand to my mouth as nausea rolled through me in waves.
He swerved to the shoulder just in time. I stumbled out of the car and doubled over, my body rejecting everything as the altitude hit like a physical blow. The mountain air was crisp and clean, but my lungs couldn't seem to process it properly. Each breath felt shallow, insufficient.
Holden appeared beside me, his own face green-tinged and drawn. "I've got you," he murmured, gathering my hair back as another wave of sickness overtook me. His hands were steady despite his own obvious discomfort, holding me upright when my legs threatened to give out.
When the worst passed, I slumped against him, both of us breathing hard in the thin air. "Some romantic getaway this is," I managed weakly.
He pressed his lips to the top of my head, his voice rough. "Hey, we're in this together. Altitude sickness and all."
Back in the car, I found a packet of wet wipes in the glove compartment and gently cleaned his face as he drove, noting how his hands trembled slightly on the wheel. The headache was building behind my eyes, a dull throb that matched the rhythm of my heartbeat.
"Your turn," I said when he pulled over again twenty minutes later, this time for his own bout with the mountain's harsh welcome. I held a cool cloth to his forehead as he leaned against the car, his breathing labored.
"This wasn't how I pictured our reunion," he said with a weak smile.
"It's perfect," I whispered, and meant it. Even sick, even struggling, we were taking care of each other. No one had ever held my hair back when I was ill. No one had ever pressed cool cloths to my fevered skin with such tenderness.
The cabin appeared through the pine trees like something from a fairy tale—rough-hewn logs and wide windows that reflected the mountain peaks beyond. Holden parked and immediately came around to help me out, his arm steady around my waist as we walked slowly toward the front door.
"I have a surprise for you," he said, his voice carrying a note of nervous excitement despite our shared misery.
I looked at him questioningly, but he just smiled and unlocked the door.
The soft mewing that greeted us made my heart stop.
"Whiskers?" I breathed, hardly daring to believe it.
A familiar orange blur launched itself from the couch, landing in my arms with a purr so loud it seemed to fill the entire cabin. I buried my face in his soft fur, tears streaming down my cheeks as he head-butted my chin in that particular way that meant 'I missed you too.'
"How?" I looked up at Holden through my tears, clutching Whiskers to my chest.
"I called the shelter the day after you contacted me," he said quietly, sitting beside me on the couch. "I knew you'd given him up because your family... because they made you. I couldn't let him stay there when you needed him most."
Whiskers settled into my lap, his purr a constant vibration of contentment. I reached for Holden's hand, squeezing it tight. "You brought me my cat."
"I brought you everything I could," he said simply.
Over the next few days, we fell into a rhythm as natural as breathing. Morning coffee on the deck, watching the sun paint the mountain peaks gold while Whiskers wound around our ankles. Gentle walks along the forest paths when my energy allowed, Holden's hand always ready to steady me when the altitude or my illness made me dizzy.
Evenings were the best. We'd sit by the fireplace, Whiskers stretched across both our laps like a furry bridge connecting us. Holden would read aloud from the books he'd brought—poetry, adventure stories, anything to fill the comfortable silence with his voice. Sometimes I'd fall asleep against his shoulder, and I'd wake hours later to find a blanket tucked around me and his arm still holding me close.
"I never had this," I told him one evening, watching the flames dance in the hearth. "A home that felt like home."
His arm tightened around me. "You have it now."
Whiskers stretched and resettled, his paws kneading against my leg in that ancient cat gesture of pure contentment. For the first time in my life, I understood what he was feeling. This was what safety felt like. This was what love looked like when it wasn't conditional or complicated by family politics.
This was what I'd been searching for my entire life, and I'd found it here in the mountains with the two beings who loved me exactly as I was—dying or not, worthy or not, enough or not.
Here, I was simply, completely loved.
You may also like





