'Devour the Snake' is the perfect, emotionally charged conclusion to the love story of Captain James Hook, Wendy Darling, and Bane “Roc” Maddred. The story opens with Roc’s bold proposal to marry them both, but the book's true heart lies in James’s unraveling insecurities. He’s drowning in doubt—unsure of his worth, unsure of his place in Darkland, unsure if he deserves the fierce, unconditional love Wendy and Roc offer so freely. His struggle is raw, vulnerable, and painfully human as he fights to believe he is more than the dark, broken pieces he carries.
Wendy and Roc see him faltering. They see the cracks, the fear, the self‑doubt—and instead of stepping back, they anchor him with a love that refuses to let him drift into the dark alone. As Roc reminds Wendy, “As much as Captain James Hook likes to believe he is a cutthroat pirate, at the heart of it, he is just a big gooey cinnamon cake who wants to be loved and accepted for who he is. But more than that, he wants to feel worthy.”
Emotional, cathartic, and beautifully tender, this finale delivers everything it needed to. A worthy, heartfelt end to Hook, Wendy, and Roc’s unforgettable love story.
The closing confession between them says it all:
"I love you both so much," I whisper. "I didn't know what love was until you two," James confesses. Roc is silent for a beat. "I was terrified of love until you two." He runs his fingers over James's hair, then does the same to me, tucking a stray lock behind my ear. "I am terrified no more." I sink into the sensation of being sated and content.
A perfect final moment of being seen, chosen, and utterly content.