TheFuntomRose
Thorn does not believe in being saved.
She believes in exits. In locked doors. In silence. In keeping her head down, her hands busy, and her past buried so deep no one thinks to look for it.
After a month of failed job interviews, Thorn walks into the Rosewood Lounge for one reason only: tea.
She does not expect the crooked job sign in the window.
She does not expect Noah Thornwood, all chaos, charm and impossible warmth.
She does not expect Elias Thornwood, all control, sharp edges and quiet protection.
And she definitely does not expect a non-alcoholic café-bar full of people who somehow notice too much, ask too many questions, and make far too much room for a woman who has spent her whole life trying not to need anyone.
Thorn is brilliant, guarded, exhausted and terrifyingly calm. She is a bartender who does not drink, an artist who hides her work, a woman with chronic pain, old grief, and a history no one at Rosewood could ever imagine.
But Rosewood has its own way of loving people.
Through tea.
Through food.
Through ridiculous theories.
Through late-night shifts, handmade blankets, found family, and the kind of loyalty Thorn has never trusted enough to want.
The longer she stays, the harder it becomes to pretend she is only an employee.
Because Noah sees the loneliness she hides behind sarcasm.
Elias sees the pain she refuses to name.
Zara knows the girl beneath the armour.
And slowly, painfully, Thorn starts to learn that family is not always blood.
Sometimes family is the people who save you a seat.
Sometimes it is the people who stay.
And sometimes, after years of surviving alone, there is finally room for one more.