





Fading From Forever ~ Songs To Stories Volume V ~ By Britt Wolfe
Inspired By: You're Losing Me (From The Vault) by Taylor Swift
What do you do when the love of your life is slipping away—and there’s nothing you can do to stop it?
Eve was the kind of woman who held everyone together. A loving wife. A fiercely loyal best friend. A dreamer who once filled empty rooms with plans for a future that would never come. But now, faced with a diagnosis that steals more of her each day, Eve is caught in the ache of letting go—of her dreams, her body, her life.
As her husband, Sebastian, pulls away in grief, and her best friend, Maddy, clings tighter, Eve must navigate the quiet unraveling of everything she once was. Love becomes both anchor and agony. Time, both cruel and precious. And in the end, it isn’t about how long you stay, but how deeply you’re held when you go.
Fading From Forever is a breathtakingly tender story of love, friendship, and the courage it takes to face the inevitable. For anyone who has ever loved someone through the hardest goodbye, this is a tribute to the kind of love that never fades—even when the person does.
Inspired By: You're Losing Me (From The Vault) by Taylor Swift
What do you do when the love of your life is slipping away—and there’s nothing you can do to stop it?
Eve was the kind of woman who held everyone together. A loving wife. A fiercely loyal best friend. A dreamer who once filled empty rooms with plans for a future that would never come. But now, faced with a diagnosis that steals more of her each day, Eve is caught in the ache of letting go—of her dreams, her body, her life.
As her husband, Sebastian, pulls away in grief, and her best friend, Maddy, clings tighter, Eve must navigate the quiet unraveling of everything she once was. Love becomes both anchor and agony. Time, both cruel and precious. And in the end, it isn’t about how long you stay, but how deeply you’re held when you go.
Fading From Forever is a breathtakingly tender story of love, friendship, and the courage it takes to face the inevitable. For anyone who has ever loved someone through the hardest goodbye, this is a tribute to the kind of love that never fades—even when the person does.
Inspired By: You're Losing Me (From The Vault) by Taylor Swift
What do you do when the love of your life is slipping away—and there’s nothing you can do to stop it?
Eve was the kind of woman who held everyone together. A loving wife. A fiercely loyal best friend. A dreamer who once filled empty rooms with plans for a future that would never come. But now, faced with a diagnosis that steals more of her each day, Eve is caught in the ache of letting go—of her dreams, her body, her life.
As her husband, Sebastian, pulls away in grief, and her best friend, Maddy, clings tighter, Eve must navigate the quiet unraveling of everything she once was. Love becomes both anchor and agony. Time, both cruel and precious. And in the end, it isn’t about how long you stay, but how deeply you’re held when you go.
Fading From Forever is a breathtakingly tender story of love, friendship, and the courage it takes to face the inevitable. For anyone who has ever loved someone through the hardest goodbye, this is a tribute to the kind of love that never fades—even when the person does.
Excerpt From Fading From Forever By Britt Wolfe
“You can keep fighting,” Sebastian said with finality, like it was something she had simply forgotten to do.
Eve let out a ragged breath, her chest tightening, breaking, as she reached for him. Her fingers traced his jaw, cupping his face with a tenderness that made it all the more unbearable.
“No,” she whispered, her voice trembling, almost crumbling. “I can’t.”
Her thumbs brushed against the tears on his cheeks, and she willed him to understand—to see her, not as the person he needed her to be, but as the woman who was already slipping away.
“And I need you,” she whispered, her breath shaking, “to love me enough to let me go.”
Sebastian’s eyes burned into hers, dark and drowning, full of all the things he wanted to say. He shook his head once. Then again. Harder. His breath came in short, desperate gasps, his whole body trembling, as if denying it with every fibre of his being might make it less true.
“I don’t know how,” he choked out, his voice unraveling, raw and wrecked. “I don’t want to.”
And in that moment, with his grief pressed between them, neither of them could breathe