Man, that's a question that's been on my mind since I finished reading it. 'Gentle Forest' is... complicated, you know? It's a slice-of-life story about those two girls retreating to the countryside after burnout, and a lot of the book is just the quiet rhythm of their days—tending the garden, fixing up the old house, that sort of thing. The ending isn't a classic 'happily ever after' where everything is resolved with a bow. It's more bittersweet. One of them decides to stay, truly putting down roots, while the other feels the pull to return to the city, changed but not completely transformed.
I wouldn't call it purely happy. It's hopeful, though. The last chapter has them sitting on the porch, acknowledging they might be on different paths soon, but the shared time in the forest healed something fundamental for both. The happiness is in the quiet acceptance, not a grand reunion or a perfect solution. It left me feeling peaceful, but also a little wistful, which I think was the point all along.