She came. Of course she came. She brought her toddler, Leo, asleep in a carrier on her chest. When she saw Eli standing in the doorway wearing the Lion, her eyes went wide, then soft. “Oh,” she said. “Oh, I see.”
“The last one,” Eli said.
The masks still sit on his shelves. He wears the Lion when he needs courage, the Fox when he needs wit, the Skull when he needs silence. But most days, now, he wears nothing at all. He just walks through the world as himself—folding and unfolding, learning the slow geometry of a life that finally fits. Wintercroft mask collection
And on the shelf, between the Ram and the Stag, the Hare watches over everything. Long ears curved. Cardboard smile patient. Waiting for the next time Eli forgets that the gentlest mask is the one you never have to put on. She came
But Eli—Eli felt his heart open like a door he’d forgotten he owned. The Hare was not fierce or cunning or ancient or still. The Hare was gentle . Not the gentleness of fear, of making himself small so others wouldn’t notice him. But the gentleness of a creature who knows it can run, knows it can fight, knows it can disappear into the underbrush—and chooses instead to stay. To be seen. To let the tea steep and the baby babble and the woman he loved hum off-key. When she saw Eli standing in the doorway