Three days to love a daughter across impossible distances. Three days to say everything left unsaid. For twenty-two years, Borai has loved a daughter he never got to hold. When Thida performed the severance and chose to live wholly in 1872, she took their unborn child with her—leaving him in modern-day Seattle with nothing but dreams and grief. He's written to Makara in journals she'll never read. Built a life around the hole she left. Mourned a daughter who exists in another century, another timeline, forever out of reach. Until the convergence. For three impossible days, the boundaries between timelines collapse. Makara—now twenty-two, with a husband and son in 1872 Cambodia—is pulled into a phantom existence in 2046. Finally, father and daughter meet. They have seventy-two hours to build a lifetime of love. Seventy-two hours for him to tell her he's loved her since before she was born. Seventy-two hours before the phantom dissolves and she returns to her real life, forgetting everything. The stunning conclusion to the Threads of Jasmine trilogy—a story about parent-child love that transcends time, the grief we carry for those we've lost, and the proof that three days can matter as much as a lifetime. For fans of The Time Traveler's Wife and The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue comes an achingly beautiful meditation on love, loss, and the souls that choose each other across impossible distances. Book 3 of Threads of Jasmine series.