Buying a car feels strangely heavier than I expected.
Not physically, obviously. The keys are small, light, and simple enough that they shouldn't mean much on their own. But as I sit behind the wheel of the new SUV with both hands resting on it, the weight of what I just did settles somewhere in my chest like a quiet, inconvenient realization.
I bought a car.
Not for myself. Not because I suddenly developed some dramatic interest in vehicles. Not because I wanted to look cool while driving around like some retired rich uncle with too much money and not enough hobbies.
I bought it because three little girls are sitting in the back seat, looking around like this is the greatest event in the history of transportation.
That is new. Deeply strange. A little terrifying. And, annoyingly enough, not unpleasant.
"Hikari likes this car," Hikari announces from the middle seat for probably the fourth time since we left the dealership parking lot.
"Yes, Hikari," I answer while keeping my eyes on the road. "You've mentioned that."
"Hikari likes the seat."
"I know."
"Hikari likes the window."
"I also know."
"Hikari likes Papa driving."
That one makes my hands pause slightly on the steering wheel. Only slightly, but enough that I notice it.
"…Good," I say after a moment.
Karin immediately leans forward against her seatbelt, which is impressive considering I made absolutely sure all three of them were secured properly before even starting the engine. "Papa, can this car go super fast?"
"No."
"But can it?"
"Yes."
"Then why no?"
"Because I would like to remain a free citizen."
Karin thinks about that for a moment with the dangerous seriousness of a child trying to locate a loophole. "…Can we go fast if no one sees?"
"No."
"…What if Auntie drives?"
"Still no."
"…What if there are monsters?"
"That is a different legal category."
Karin nods slowly, as if she is seriously filing that information away for future use.
That concerns me.
Beside her, Ruri sits quietly near the window, hands folded neatly over her lap, eyes focused outside as the city passes by. Unlike her sisters, she isn't bouncing, shouting, or asking whether traffic laws can be negotiated under monster-related circumstances. She's just watching everything.
The buildings. The people. The cars. The sunlight reflecting across glass windows. Every now and then, her eyes soften slightly, like she's trying to understand the world beyond our small apartment and the chaos that keeps swallowing us.
"…Ruri?" I ask gently, glancing at her through the rearview mirror.
She turns her head slightly. "Yes, Papa?"
"You okay back there?"
She nods, then looks outside again. "…It's pretty."
Simple words. Quiet ones. But they land somewhere I'm not prepared for.
Because this is probably still new to them. Everything is. Cars, roads, buildings, convenience stores, snacks, anime, hugs, hospitals, nearly dying.
Okay, hopefully that last one doesn't become a regular part of their development.
I clear my throat and focus on the road again. "…Yeah. It is."
For a while, the drive continues like that. Hikari asks questions at a rate that should legally require mana reinforcement, Karin tries to discover every possible feature of the car without leaving her seat, and Ruri quietly monitors both of them like a tiny exhausted guardian.
"Papa, why is that light red?" Hikari asks.
"So people stop."
"Why stop?"
"So cars don't crash."
"Why crash?"
"Because people are bad at patience."
"Hikari understands."
She does not.
Karin, meanwhile, spends most of the drive testing the limits of what counts as sitting still. Apparently this includes leaning left, leaning right, twisting around to inspect the trunk area, attempting to look out every window at once, and asking if she can claim the car as her "mobile base."
I say no.
She says she'll negotiate later.
Again, concerning.
Ruri occasionally corrects her sisters, quietly reminds Hikari not to undo her seatbelt, and once gently tugs Karin back when she leans too far forward.
"Sit properly," Ruri says.
"I am sitting properly."
"You're sideways."
"That's advanced sitting."
"Karin…"
"Fine, fine."
I watch all of it through the mirror and feel something strange. Pride, maybe. Exhaustion too. Mostly confusion. But pride is definitely somewhere in there.
A few months ago, if someone told me I would be driving home in a newly purchased SUV while three dragon daughters debated car rules in the back seat, I would have assumed they were either drunk, cursed, or involved in illegal prophecy.
And yet here I am. Driving. Listening. Answering questions. Existing as some kind of father figure.
Honestly? This might be one of my greatest achievements.
Better than defeating the Demon King.
The Demon King never asked me why traffic lights exist.
Karin suddenly lifts her hand. "Papa!"
"No."
"You didn't even hear the question!"
"I recognized the tone."
She pouts. "Can we go shopping again?"
I stare ahead through the windshield.
"…The mall is still destroyed."
"Oh."
The car becomes quiet for a moment.
Then Karin asks, with far too much seriousness, "…Because of us?"
"No," I answer immediately, because that is one emotional burden I refuse to let her carry. "Because an S-rank dungeon decided to be rude."
"Hikari thinks the dungeon was very rude," Hikari agrees.
"It was extremely rude," I say.
Ruri looks at me through the mirror. "…Will there be another one?"
That question is soft. Too soft. The kind of question children ask when they're trying not to sound scared.
I keep my eyes on the road, my grip tightening just slightly around the steering wheel. There are many things I could say. I could lie and say no. I could make some confident adult promise that everything will be fine. I could tell them nothing bad will happen as long as I'm around.
But I've fought enough wars to know promises like that are fragile.
So I choose the safest truth I can give them.
"…Not today," I answer.
Ruri nods slowly. Karin goes quiet for a few seconds. Hikari looks down at her hands, and for one brief, heavy moment, the car feels too quiet.
So I do what any responsible adult would do.
I change the subject badly.
"…Anyway," I say, "no shopping at destroyed malls."
Karin immediately perks up. "What about undestroyed malls?"
"…We'll discuss that later."
"Hikari wants snacks from an undestroyed mall."
"Of course Hikari does."
And just like that, the atmosphere softens again. Good. Temporary peace restored.
Probably.
A few minutes later, Hikari presses both hands against her lap and asks, "Papa, when we move, will the car come with us?"
"Yes. That is generally how owning a car works."
"Hikari wants the car to have a name."
"No."
"Karin agrees. It needs a name."
"Absolutely not."
Ruri tilts her head slightly, still looking out the window. "…What kind of name?"
"Don't encourage them," I warn.
Karin immediately grins. "Black Dragon."
"No."
"Shadow King."
"No."
"Papa's Powerful Mobile Fortress."
"Absolutely not."
"Hikari likes Fluffy."
I nearly miss a turn.
"…The black SUV will not be named Fluffy."
"Hikari thinks Fluffy is strong."
"It is objectively not."
Ruri covers her mouth with one hand, trying very hard not to laugh.
Traitor.
By the time we reach the apartment complex, I have answered twenty-three questions, rejected seven dangerous suggestions, approved one snack request for later, denied three proposed car names, and explained twice why climbing onto the roof of the car is not a normal family activity.
So overall, a successful first drive.
Mostly.
I park the SUV carefully in the apartment parking area and sit there for a moment after turning off the engine. The sudden quiet feels strange. Not peaceful exactly, but full. Like the car still contains the leftover warmth of their laughter and questions.
The girls immediately unbuckle with varying degrees of grace. Ruri does it properly, Hikari needs help, and Karin somehow unbuckles like she's escaping restraints.
I step out and look at the SUV from the outside. It looks good. Solid. Practical. Ours.
That last thought bothers me most. Not because I dislike it, but because I don't. Which is honestly worse.
"Papa?" Ruri asks, standing beside me.
"…Yeah?"
"You're staring."
"…I bought a car."
Karin grins proudly. "We bought a car."
I look at her. "You contributed emotional pressure."
"That counts."
Hikari raises both hands. "Hikari contributed taste!"
"That is also debatable."
Ruri smiles softly. "…It's nice."
Yeah.
It is.
We head back up to the apartment shortly afterward, and the moment we step inside, the difference becomes painfully obvious.
The apartment is small.
It was always small, but now that I've spent the entire day thinking about bigger spaces, safer neighborhoods, schools, cars, and the terrifying concept of long-term planning, it feels even smaller. The living room barely fits all of us comfortably. The kitchen is too cramped. The hallway is too narrow. The curtains have already suffered one fire-related incident, and the couch has witnessed things no furniture should ever be forced to endure.
I take off my shoes, look around, and sigh.
"…Yeah. We're moving."
"Hikari likes moving!"
"You don't know what moving is yet."
"Hikari likes it anyway."
Karin runs toward the couch and jumps onto it immediately. "Can our new house have a bigger couch?"
"Yes."
"And a bigger kitchen?"
"Yes."
"And a place where I can train?"
"No."
"Aww."
Ruri carefully places her shoes aside, then looks around the apartment with a thoughtful expression. She doesn't say anything at first, but I can tell she's thinking.
That usually means I'm about to be emotionally ambushed.
"…Papa," she says quietly, "will Auntie help too?"
That reminds me.
Ruruka.
Right. I should call her.
Mostly because if I move without telling her, she will somehow appear through a wall and accuse me of reckless independence.
I take out my phone and dial her number. It rings once. Twice. Then she answers.
"Nii-sama?"
Before I can respond, the girls immediately react.
"AUNTIE!" Karin shouts from the couch.
"Hikari hears Auntie!"
Ruri steps closer too, visibly brightening. "…Auntie is coming?"
I look at them, then sigh. "Yes. Your auntie is coming."
The excitement that follows is immediate. Hikari claps, Karin cheers, and Ruri smiles quietly with the kind of happiness that makes me feel both proud and attacked.
On the other side of the phone, Ruruka goes silent for a moment.
Then she says, "…I heard all of that."
"Good. Saves time."
She sighs. "What happened this time?"
"Nothing catastrophic."
"That is not reassuring coming from you."
"Fair."
I explain the situation briefly: the promotion, the car, the Chiba condominium listing, and the general plan to move out soon. Ruruka listens quietly at first, only occasionally making small sounds that tell me she is either processing information or preparing a lecture.
Probably both.
"So," she says eventually, "you bought a car."
"I kind of had to."
"You bought an SUV."
"I have three children now."
"You bought it in cash, didn't you?"
"…That feels irrelevant."
"Nii-sama."
"Yes."
"You absolutely bought it in cash."
"…Maybe."
She sighs again, but this time there's amusement beneath it. "I'll come over."
"Good."
"I want to see this condominium listing too."
"That's why I called."
"Sure it is."
The call ends shortly afterward, and somehow the apartment becomes even louder after that because the girls now know Ruruka is coming. Karin immediately declares that Auntie must inspect the new car, Hikari says Auntie must sit in the middle seat because it is "the important seat," and Ruri quietly says Auntie will probably want tea first.
Ruri is correct.
Ruri is often correct.
That also concerns me.
I make tea because I am, allegedly, a functioning adult. The girls take control of the television again while I prepare cups at the cramped kitchen counter, and their favorite anime starts playing almost immediately.
Based on the shouting from the living room, the rubber pirate is doing something dramatic.
Again.
"GO, LUFFY!" Karin cheers.
"Hikari believes in Luffy!"
Ruri sits neatly beside them, clearly invested but expressing it with significantly more dignity.
I carry the tea to the dining table and sit down while waiting for Ruruka. From where I am, I can see almost the entire apartment without moving much, which is convenient but also a clear sign of how tiny this place is.
The girls occupy the living room like they're trying to compensate for the lack of space through sheer energy. Karin nearly kicks the corner of the table while cheering, Hikari keeps leaning forward with sparkling eyes, and Ruri gently pulls both of them back every few minutes.
This apartment really is too small.
It's not just the space. It's the feeling. Like we're all crammed into a life that no longer fits.
That is a very annoying thought.
Mostly because it sounds mature.
I dislike that.
A knock comes at the door a little later, and the girls react instantly.
"AUNTIE!"
Before I can even stand properly, Karin is already running toward the door, Hikari following behind her, and Ruri calling for them to slow down while also clearly moving faster than usual.
I get there in time to open it before Karin attempts to do something illegal to the lock.
Ruruka stands outside, ponytail neat, sword at her hip, and expression already prepared for whatever nonsense she assumes I have caused.
"Nii-sama," she says.
"Ruruka."
The girls immediately attack her emotionally and physically.
"Auntie!"
"Hikari missed Auntie!"
"Play with us!" Karin demands.
Ruruka freezes for half a second. Then her expression softens in a way she would probably deny if I pointed it out.
"…Later," she says, patting Hikari's head first, then Karin's, then Ruri's. "Let me talk to your Papa first."
Karin pouts dramatically. Hikari nods with the seriousness of someone accepting a royal decree, while Ruri gives a polite little bow.
"…Okay, Auntie," Ruri says.
"Hikari will wait," Hikari adds proudly.
"For five minutes," Karin mutters.
Ruruka gives Karin a look.
Karin immediately looks away.
Impressive.
Ruruka steps inside, removes her shoes, and looks around the apartment.
Then she glances at me.
"…Yeah," she says immediately. "You need to move."
I stare at her. "You didn't even sit down yet."
"I don't need to."
Fair.
We sit at the dining table shortly afterward, with the condominium listing open on my laptop between us. The girls return to the anime, though Karin keeps glancing back like she's waiting for the exact second she can abduct Ruruka into playtime.
Ruruka looks through the listing carefully, and unlike me, she actually knows what she's looking for. She checks the layout, building security, nearby schools, access to stores, emergency routes, parking, maintenance fees, and probably twenty other things I would have ignored because the living room looked big enough.
This is why younger sisters are dangerous.
They grow up, become competent, and then use that competence to judge you.
"…Two floors," she murmurs. "High-rise unit. Multiple bedrooms. Wide living area. Good kitchen. Strong security. Amenities are decent. Chiba location is quieter than central Tokyo, but still accessible. The commute shouldn't be terrible either."
"You sound like Aaron."
"That should worry you."
"It does."
She scrolls again, studies a few more photos, then nods. "It's good."
That actually relieves me more than I expected.
"You think so?"
"I do," she says. "It's spacious, secure, and far better than this apartment. The girls need room. You need room. And honestly, this place already looks like it lost a war."
I glance toward the curtain.
The burned one.
"…One battle."
"Nii-sama."
"…Fine. Maybe two."
Ruruka sighs, but there's a faint smile there. "So that explains the SUV in the parking lot. That's the one you bought, huh?"
"I kind of had to."
"You sound like a father."
"That was unnecessarily cruel."
"It was accurate."
I lean back slightly and stare at the listing again. For a while, neither of us says anything. The girls keep laughing in the living room, the anime keeps playing, the apartment feels small, and the future feels large.
Too large.
Eventually, I speak.
"…I'm worried."
Ruruka looks at me immediately. Not teasing this time. Not joking. Just listening.
I sigh and rub the back of my neck. "About the kids. The house. School. Their papers. Their safety. Whether they'll fit in. Whether I can actually do this properly. Everything."
Saying it out loud feels worse than thinking it. More real. More pathetic. More adult.
Terrible.
Ruruka doesn't answer immediately. Instead, she reaches over and places a hand on my shoulder. It's firm, steady, and annoyingly reassuring.
"Welcome to adulting life, Onii-sama," she says.
I stare at her. "…I didn't sign up for this."
"Too late."
"That's not how consent works."
"That's how fatherhood works."
I hate how correct that sounds.
She doesn't remove her hand from my shoulder right away. Her expression softens, and for once, she doesn't look like my strict little sister preparing to scold me. She looks like someone who remembers me from before all of this. Before the girls. Before this apartment became a nursery, battlefield, dining hall, and anime theater all at once.
"You know," she says quietly, "you've always been like this."
I narrow my eyes. "Lazy?"
"Yes, but that's not what I meant."
"Rude."
"Accurate," she says, then continues before I can complain. "You always act like everything is troublesome. You complain, avoid responsibility, pretend you don't care, and then somehow end up carrying the heaviest burden anyway."
"That sounds like poor life management."
"It is. But it's also you."
I look away because the conversation is becoming dangerously emotional.
Ruruka notices, of course.
She always does.
"When you fought the Demon King, you acted like you only did it because the alternative was annoying," she says. "When you sealed those ruins years ago, you said you were only helping because the paperwork would be worse if the city collapsed. When you rescued me from that dungeon, you complained the entire time that I interrupted your nap."
"You did interrupt my nap."
"I was bleeding out."
"Very inconsiderate timing."
Ruruka's mouth twitches like she's trying not to smile. "My point is, Onii-sama, you always pretend you're being dragged into responsibility. But when it matters, you never run away."
That lands harder than expected.
I glance toward the living room.
Karin is cheering. Hikari is clapping. Ruri is smiling.
All three of them are safe. Here. With me. For now.
Ruruka follows my gaze and lowers her voice.
"And those girls know it too."
I don't answer.
She squeezes my shoulder once. "They're not asking you to be perfect. They're asking you to be there. And you already are."
"That sounds dangerously sentimental."
"It's true."
"Truth can be inconvenient."
"Most important things are."
I sigh and lean back in my chair. "…I don't know how to raise children."
"No one does at first."
"I found them as eggs."
"That is unusual, yes."
"They turned into children after a nap."
"Also unusual."
"One of them breathes fire when excited, one of them investigates everything like a tiny scholar with no survival instinct, and the responsible one is somehow doing a better job than me."
Ruruka glances toward the living room. "Ruri is very mature."
"That's what worries me."
Her expression changes slightly.
Good. She understands.
I continue, quieter this time. "She's a child, but she keeps trying to hold everything together. Karin acts fearless, but she got scared in the dungeon. Hikari laughs and asks questions, but she remembers too much. I can protect them in a fight. That part is simple. But this?"
I gesture vaguely around the apartment, toward the laptop, toward the small shoes near the entrance, toward the scattered toys and the anime playing in the background. "School, friends, home, documents, meals, routines, nightmares, birthdays, normal life… I don't know what I'm doing."
Ruruka listens to all of it without interrupting.
That makes it worse.
If she teased me, I could deflect. If she scolded me, I could complain. But she just listens like my worries actually matter, which is extremely unfair.
After a moment, she speaks.
"Onii-sama, do you know what I saw when I came in?"
"A cramped apartment?"
"Yes," she says immediately. "But besides that."
"…A burned curtain?"
"Yes. But besides that too."
I slowly look at her.
She smiles faintly. "I saw three children who ran to the door because they were excited to see family. I saw tea already prepared on the table. I saw toys in the living room, shoes by the entrance, snacks on the counter, and a laptop open to a condominium listing because their father is thinking seriously about their future."
I open my mouth, but no words come out.
Terrible.
She continues, mercilessly kind.
"You're worried because you care. You're tired because you're trying. You're scared because this matters. That doesn't mean you're failing. It means you already accepted them."
I stare at the table.
The tea has cooled slightly.
Very rude of it.
"…You're getting good at speeches," I mutter.
"I learned from watching you monologue dramatically during crises."
"I do not monologue."
"You absolutely do."
"I provide tactical commentary."
"While glowing and threatening monsters."
"That is different."
"It is not."
From the living room, Karin suddenly shouts, "Auntie! Papa monologues a lot!"
I slowly turn my head.
Karin immediately looks at the television like she said nothing.
Hikari raises her hand. "Hikari thinks Papa's monologues are cool."
"Thank you, Hikari."
Ruri quietly adds, "…Sometimes they are long."
Betrayal.
Absolute betrayal.
Ruruka laughs softly, and the sound loosens something in my chest.
"See?" she says. "You're already doing better than you think."
I sigh, but this time it doesn't feel quite as heavy. "That is an incredibly low bar."
"Maybe. But you're clearing it."
"Barely."
"Still counts."
I hate that she's cheering me up successfully.
That should be illegal.
Ruruka stands from the table and walks toward the living room for a moment. The girls immediately brighten again, but instead of letting them drag her into playtime, she kneels slightly so she's closer to their height.
"Girls," she says, "your Papa is working hard for you."
Karin blinks. "Papa?"
"Hikari thinks Papa is always tired."
"He is," Ruruka says.
"Rude," I mutter from the table.
"But," she continues, ignoring me professionally, "he bought a car so you can travel safely. He's looking for a bigger home so you can have your own rooms. He's thinking about your school, your future, and everything you'll need."
Ruri looks toward me.
Karin does too.
Hikari's eyes widen slightly.
I suddenly feel very exposed.
Terrible little sister.
Absolutely merciless.
"So," Ruruka says gently, "when he looks tired, make sure you give him lots of hugs, okay?"
"Hikari can do that!"
Karin grins. "Easy."
Ruri nods softly. "…We will."
Before I can defend myself, Hikari runs over first and climbs into my lap again. Karin follows by throwing herself against my side, and Ruri approaches more carefully before hugging my arm.
I sit there frozen for a moment, surrounded by three small bodies and an overwhelming amount of trust.
Ruruka watches from the living room with the smile of someone who planned this.
"…You're enjoying this," I accuse.
"Very much."
"This is emotional manipulation."
"It's family bonding."
"Same thing."
Hikari looks up at me. "Papa is warm."
"Karin thinks Papa needs more training."
"No."
Ruri rests her forehead lightly against my arm. "…Papa, thank you."
Ah.
That one gets me.
I stare ahead blankly for a second, because looking down might be dangerous.
"…You're welcome," I say quietly.
Ruruka gives me a knowing look.
I ignore it.
Aggressively.
After the girls finally release me, mostly because the anime reaches another dramatic moment and Karin cannot physically resist cheering for Luffy, Ruruka returns to the table. She sits across from me again, softer now but still carrying that terrifying younger-sister authority.
"How about we visit the condominium tomorrow?" she suggests. "You, me, and the girls. If it feels right in person, then you proceed."
I think about it.
Honestly, that makes sense. Pictures are one thing. A place is different when you stand inside it, especially if you're trying to imagine three dragon daughters living there without property damage.
"…That's probably a good idea," I say.
"Good. I'll help you check the layout, safety, nearby schools, and transportation."
"I was mostly going to check if the living room was big enough."
"I know. That's why I'm coming."
Fair.
She looks back at the laptop. "We'll also need to plan the move properly. Furniture, registration, school consultation, child records, neighborhood inspection, and probably some magic-proofing."
"…Magic-proofing?"
She looks at me.
I look toward the burned curtain.
"…Right."
"Also, the new place needs a storage system for your hunter equipment and dangerous materials."
"I can put them in Arcane Storage."
"You can, but should you put everything there forever?"
"Yes."
"No."
"Rude."
"Responsible."
I groan quietly and rest my forehead against the table. "This adulting thing has too many categories."
Ruruka pats my head once.
I immediately sit upright. "Don't do that."
"You looked pathetic."
"I am your older brother."
"And yet."
Karin suddenly shouts from the living room, "Auntie! After this episode, you're playing with us!"
Ruruka closes her eyes. "…I see I've been scheduled."
"Hikari scheduled Auntie too!"
"Of course Hikari did," I mutter.
Ruri adds softly, "Auntie can rest first if she wants…"
Ruruka's face softens again.
That one always gets her.
"Thank you, Ruri," she says gently. "I'll rest for a little while, then I'll play."
Karin pumps a fist. "Victory."
"Hikari wins Auntie time."
"You two are terrifying negotiators," I say.
"Hikari learned from Papa."
"No, you did not."
Ruruka looks amused. "She might have."
"Do not support this."
The evening settles into something strangely peaceful after that. Ruruka stays at the dining table with me for a while, helping review the condominium listing properly. She points out things I missed, like emergency exits, elevator access, parking security, building maintenance history, and whether the surrounding area has safe routes for children.
I pretend I would have checked those things eventually.
She does not believe me.
The girls eventually pull her into the living room after the episode ends, and despite claiming she would only play for a little while, Ruruka somehow ends up sitting on the floor while Hikari explains the plot of the anime to her in an extremely serious third-person summary.
"Hikari thinks Luffy is strong because he never gives up."
Ruruka nods. "That's admirable."
"Karin thinks punching solves many problems."
"It does not," Ruri says immediately.
I raise a hand from the dining table. "Ruri is correct."
Karin pouts. "Sometimes it does."
Ruruka glances at me.
I look away.
"…Sometimes," I admit.
"Karin wins."
"No, Karin does not win."
The conversation devolves from there into a debate about whether pirates are technically criminals, whether treasure belongs to whoever finds it first, and whether stretching powers count as magic. Hikari takes notes on nothing. Karin declares she would be an excellent pirate captain. Ruri says she would return stolen treasure to its rightful owner.
I think Ruri might be the only reason this family has a future.
At some point, I quietly stand and move toward the kitchen to make another round of tea. The apartment is still small. The floor is still cluttered. The couch is still old. The curtain is still burned. Nothing physical has changed.
But somehow, the room feels less cramped.
Maybe it's because Ruruka is here. Maybe it's because the girls are laughing. Maybe it's because tomorrow we're visiting what might become our new home.
Or maybe I'm just tired and becoming sentimental.
Terrible.
When I return with tea, Ruruka looks up from where Hikari is apparently assigning her a character role in some imaginary pirate crew.
"Navigator," Hikari says seriously. "Auntie looks responsible."
"I am responsible," Ruruka says.
"Karin wants to be captain."
"No surprise there," I mutter.
"Papa can be the sleepy wizard."
"I reject this role."
Ruri smiles. "…It fits."
Betrayal continues.
Ruruka accepts the tea from me with a quiet thanks, then looks around the apartment again. Her gaze softens, and for a moment I can tell she understands exactly what I'm feeling.
This place was temporary.
It was supposed to be temporary.
A place to hide. A place to rest. A place where no one would bother me after everything I lost.
Then three eggs appeared.
And somehow, the temporary place became a home.
A messy, cramped, damaged, loud home.
But a home.
Moving suddenly feels bigger than buying a condominium. It feels like admitting this life is real. That I'm not just keeping the girls here until I figure things out. That I'm building something with them.
Ruruka seems to read my expression again.
She's annoyingly good at that.
"You're allowed to be happy about this," she says quietly, just loud enough for me to hear.
I stare into my tea. "…I didn't say I wasn't."
"You didn't have to."
"Your clairvoyance is getting irritating."
"I don't have clairvoyance."
"Then stop acting like Aaron."
She smiles faintly. "I'm serious, Onii-sama. You've spent so long surviving that you look suspicious whenever something good happens."
That is extremely rude.
Possibly accurate.
Still rude.
I don't answer right away.
The girls are laughing again. Karin has somehow decided that the couch is a ship. Hikari is giving commands from the middle cushion. Ruri is telling them not to break anything while also smiling.
Ruruka continues gently, "You don't have to earn every peaceful moment through suffering first. Sometimes good things are just good."
I let out a slow breath.
"…That sounds fake."
"It isn't."
"It feels fake."
"That's because you're difficult."
"Also rude."
"Also true."
I look at her for a moment, then toward the girls.
A new home. A new city. School. A car. A family.
I don't know when my life turned into this.
Actually, I do.
It started with three eggs in front of my door.
Still, the thought settles inside me slowly.
This really is adulting. The true version.
Not just paying bills. Not buying groceries. Not pretending to be responsible so people leave you alone.
This.
Worrying about where your kids will sleep. Whether they'll be safe. Whether they'll be happy. Whether you're doing enough. Whether you can give them something better than the chaos that keeps chasing you.
I sigh quietly.
Annoying. Terrifying. Exhausting.
And somehow…
I don't regret it.
Not even a little.
Ruruka watches me for a moment, then smiles like she already knows.
"Tomorrow," she says, "we'll go see their future home."
I glance toward the girls.
Karin is standing on the couch again.
Hikari is cheering.
Ruri is trying to pull Karin back down before property damage occurs.
"…Yeah," I mutter.
Then I stand, walk toward the living room, and grab Karin gently by the back of her shirt before she can launch herself from the couch like a deranged pirate.
"No flying indoors."
"Aww!"
"Hikari thinks Papa joined the crew!"
"I did not."
Ruri smiles up at me. "…Papa can be captain too."
Karin gasps. "Two captains?"
"That sounds unstable," Ruruka says.
"It absolutely is," I answer.
Hikari raises both hands. "Family crew!"
The room goes quiet for half a second after that.
Then Karin cheers. Ruri laughs softly. Ruruka smiles.
And me?
I just stand there holding the back of Karin's shirt, surrounded by noise, tea, anime, burned curtains, moving plans, and the terrifying realization that maybe this is what I wanted all along.
A home.
Not a peaceful one.
Obviously not.
That would be too much to ask from the universe.
But a home anyway.
And tomorrow, apparently, we're going to find a bigger one.
*****
End of Chapter 22:
Dad Status Report:
Name: Ren Arclight
Former Occupation: Retired Archmage / Former Demon King Slayer
Current Occupation: Full-Time Dragon Dad
Primary Objective:
Build a proper home while ensuring three daughters grow up safe, happy, and loved.
Daughters Under Supervision:
*Karin – Fire / Chaos / Future Pirate Captain
*Ruri – Ice / Emotional Support / Household Backbone
*Hikari – Light / Endless Questions / Certified Snack Inspector
Today's Activities:
*Completed first official family drive
*Safely transported three excited dragon daughters
*Explained traffic laws approximately twenty-three times
*Rejected multiple dangerous driving suggestions
*Denied seven proposed vehicle names
*Returned safely to apartment
*Contacted Ruruka for relocation planning
*Reviewed condominium with professional assistance
*Received emotional support from younger sister
*Accepted numerous unsolicited hugs
*Began mentally accepting long-term fatherhood
*Scheduled condominium visit
New Developments:
*SUV officially recognized as family vehicle
*Chiba relocation plans progressing smoothly
*Ruruka officially joins relocation operation
*Apartment confirmed too small for current family
*Ren openly admitted worries about raising children
*Family support network growing stronger
*"Temporary life" slowly becoming permanent
Threat Level (World):
Unknown
Currently Quiet
(Suspicious)
Threat Level (Household):
Moderate
Pirate roleplay outbreak
Sofa converted into ship
Vehicle naming debates ongoing
Daughter Safety Status:
Happy
Secure
Excited About Moving
Dad Stress Levels:
Emotionally Attacked
Recovering
Tea-Assisted
Parenting Skill Growth:
24% ➜ 31.8% (Family Bonding Bonus Applied)
Current Dad Status:
Driving
Planning
Healing
Immediate Priorities:
*Visit condominium
*Inspect neighborhood
*Prepare relocation
*Child-proof future home
*Prevent Karin from becoming pirate captain
*Stop Hikari from naming SUV "Fluffy"
Operational Assessment:
Mission Type: Domestic Expansion + Family Stabilization
Difficulty: Emotionally Increasing
Emotional Status:
Hopeful – Protective – Overthinking
Future Outlook:
A New Home Approaches
Dad Personal Statement:
"I don't know how to raise children... but I don't regret any of this."
Reality's Response:
"Congratulations. You're no longer surviving life. You're finally living it."
