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Chapter 61 - Chapter 44 — ‎

‎The vial felt heavy in my pocket.

‎Too heavy for a simple piece of glass.

‎It was a secret.

‎And I had just gotten my hands on it.

‎I left the hallway without a word.

‎They thought I was just a kid?

‎Perfect.

‎I climbed the stairs slowly, my heart beating with a cold, precise kind of anger. The kind that opens your eyes instead of closing them.

‎When I reached the landing, I should've turned right.

‎Toward my room.

‎Instead, my steps carried me left.

‎Toward my sister's room.

‎The door was slightly open.

‎Light spilled across the hallway floor in a pale strip.

‎I stopped.

‎I wasn't going to spy.

‎Not really.

‎But something still held me there.

‎Inside, Gabriel was sitting beside the bed.

‎He wasn't speaking.

‎He was watching her.

‎Avery moved in her sleep, restless, like she was trying to escape a place that existed only for her.

‎And him…

‎He was looking at her like she could disappear in the next second.

‎He leaned closer and brushed a strand of hair away from her face, his fingers grazing her cheek with a gentleness that was almost painful to witness.

‎A tender gesture.

‎Protective.

‎Far too intimate for someone who had only just entered our lives.

‎I stayed frozen behind the door.

‎They barely knew each other.

‎Barely.

‎So why did he look like a man who had already lived through losing her?

‎Why did that fear look like a memory?

‎A shiver ran through me.

‎Because that look…

‎I'd seen it before.

‎Mom had the same one.

‎Dad did too.

‎Every time they looked at Avery, it was like they were watching the edge of a cliff.

‎And me?

‎I'd been pretending not to understand.

‎But lately, it was becoming impossible to ignore.

‎I slipped a hand into my pocket.

‎My fingers closed around the vial.

‎I wasn't stupid.

‎I'd seen Mom's silences.

‎Her rushed lies.

‎Her excuses that came too fast.

‎And this hadn't started yesterday.

‎It began after Dad died.

‎After that, something shifted in our family.

‎In her.

‎The whispered phone calls.

‎The disappearances.

‎The exhaustion in her eyes.

‎The way she checked the doors and windows like something might get in.

‎At first, I blamed it on grief.

‎But no.

‎She was preparing.

‎For what?

‎I was starting to get an idea.

‎Inside the room, Gabriel murmured something I couldn't hear.

‎But the tone—I understood that perfectly.

‎He was scared.

‎Really scared.

‎For my sister.

‎I took a step back.

‎The floor creaked.

‎His gaze snapped immediately toward the door.

‎Alert.

‎Ready to move if he had to.

‎I held my breath.

‎But I didn't move.

‎---

‎Gabriel's gaze never left me.

‎He'd heard me.

‎Of course he had.

‎For a second, neither of us moved.

‎Then he stood up.

‎Slowly.

‎Without taking his eyes off Avery for too long, like he was calculating the risk of simply moving away from her.

‎He took a few steps toward the door.

‎Toward me.

‎Great.

‎Awesome.

‎Plan A: run.

‎Plan B: pretend I was just passing by like a complete idiot.

‎Too late for both.

‎He opened the door.

‎— Daniel.

‎Not aggressive.

‎Not surprised either.

‎Like he'd known I was there the whole time.

‎I straightened in the doorway.

‎— Hey.

‎Yeah.

‎Brilliant.

‎Nobel Prize for conversation.

‎His gaze flicked behind me for a second, checking the hallway, before stepping out and quietly closing the bedroom door behind him.

‎I cast one last glance at Avery as the door shut.

‎She was still moving.

‎Even asleep, she didn't look safe.

‎I sighed, then turned my attention back to Gabriel.

‎Up close, he carried that strange presence—solid, almost too calm to be honest.

‎— So… how is she? I asked.

‎He barely hesitated.

‎— According to your mother, she's fine.

‎Wrong answer.

‎I crossed my arms.

‎— And what do you think?

‎He slipped his hands into his pockets.

‎A nervous gesture. Human.

‎That surprised me.

‎— Lauren's the expert, he said at first.

‎Then, after a second:

‎— But I'd say she's safe for now.

‎For now.

‎I mentally noted the phrase.

‎Absolutely terrifying.

‎A small silence settled between us.

‎The awkward, heavy kind where nobody really knows what position to take.

‎The first time we talked, I'd thrown a thousand questions at him without thinking, and he'd been nice about it.

‎Simple.

‎But now…

‎this was different.

‎We weren't in the getting-to-know-each-other category anymore.

‎— Gabriel… do you mind if we drop the formalities? I asked.

‎Considering I already had.

‎One corner of his mouth moved.

‎Almost a smile.

‎— Not at all.

‎I nodded.

‎Okay.

‎— Then tell me what happened.

‎Direct.

‎No detours.

‎Something shifted slightly in his gaze.

‎Not closed off.

‎But careful.

‎He searched for his words.

‎And I saw the exact moment he decided not to tell me the truth.

‎Not completely.

‎— Something tried to hurt her, he finally said.

‎My heart jolted.

‎— Tried?

‎— Yes.

‎He held my gaze.

‎— And it failed.

‎That was reassuring.

‎It should've been.

‎But if it failed…

‎why did everyone look like they were expecting it to happen again?

‎I tilted my head.

‎— That wasn't a panic attack.

‎It wasn't a question.

‎Gabriel exhaled softly.

‎— No.

‎Thank you.

‎Finally, someone honest.

‎Halfway honest.

‎I ran a hand through my hair.

‎— What is it? And it's going to happen again, right?

‎Silence.

‎He didn't answer.

‎And that was more than enough.

‎A humorless laugh escaped me.

‎— Great. Awesome. I love when my life feels like a movie nobody wants to give me the script for.

‎To my surprise, that almost made him smile.

‎Almost.

‎Then he grew serious again.

‎— I understand that you want answers.

‎Ah.

‎He speaks my language.

‎— But right now, what matters is that she rests.

‎Translation: not now.

‎I stared at him for another second.

‎Trying to see if he thought I was an idiot.

‎No.

‎Actually, the opposite.

‎He looked at me like someone who knew I was going to keep digging.

‎And maybe wasn't going to stop me.

‎Interesting.

‎I nodded slowly.

‎— If she needs anything… I'm here.

‎It came out on its own.

‎Not sarcastic.

‎Not funny.

‎Just true.

‎Gabriel held my gaze.

‎And this time, he nodded too.

‎A silent agreement.

‎Between us.

‎I took a step back.

‎— Goodnight.

‎— Goodnight, Daniel.

‎I turned away.

‎But one certainty kept pounding in my head.

‎They could keep their secrets.

‎Not for much longer.

‎---

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