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Chapter 65 - Chapter 48 — ‎

Gabriel POV

‎I stayed motionless near the window.

‎The cool air did nothing to calm the chaos in my head.

‎She had figured it out.

‎Faster than expected.

‎Avery was no longer simply confused.

‎She was observing.

‎Connecting details.

‎Searching.

‎And that was exactly what worried me.

‎I had told her I would answer her questions whenever she wanted.

‎But Lauren…

‎Lauren refused completely.

‎She had spent her entire life protecting her children from this world.

‎Hiding a truth she barely understood herself.

‎Pretending none of it existed.

‎Even after what happened today.

‎Even after Avery almost died.

‎She still stood firm.

‎To Lauren, their ignorance was protection.

‎To me… it was a ticking time bomb.

‎Because Avery would not stay in the dark forever.

‎Not with those eyes.

‎Not with that determination.

‎If we didn't give her answers,

‎she would go looking for them herself.

‎And this time…

‎she might not come back.

‎I closed my eyes for a moment.

‎How was I supposed to explain things without betraying Lauren?

‎How could I protect Avery without condemning her to ignorance?

‎— You told me you'd be there if I wanted answers.

‎Her voice cut straight through my thoughts.

‎I turned around.

‎Avery was staring at me.

‎Paler than usual, but upright.

‎Determined.

‎— Now I'm asking you.

‎What's happening to me?

‎Her voice was steady.

‎But her eyes…

‎Her eyes were pleading with me.

‎I stayed silent for one second too long.

‎Because I knew everything would change after this.

‎If I spoke, there would be no going back.

‎But if I stayed silent…

‎she would search alone.

‎And I couldn't let her put herself in danger anymore.

‎— Okay.

‎The word slipped out before I could stop it.

‎I pulled the chair closer to the bed and sat down across from her.

‎Closer.

‎More serious.

‎Her eyes never left mine.

‎I cleared my throat.

‎— Avery…

‎I searched for the right words. The safe words. The ones that wouldn't terrify her.

‎— What happened in that house… wasn't the real problem.

‎The doorknob suddenly turned.

‎The door opened.

‎I didn't even need to look back to know who had entered.

‎---

‎Lauren walked in.

‎Silent.

‎Straight-backed.

‎Her gaze moved from me to Avery in a fraction of a second.

‎She had heard.

‎Of course she had heard.

‎— Gabriel.

‎Her voice wasn't loud.

‎But it was sharp.

‎A warning.

‎Avery straightened slightly in the bed.

‎— Mom, no.

‎Lauren walked closer slowly.

‎Her eyes inspected Avery's neck, her hands, her complexion.

‎Relief flashed briefly across her face… then vanished.

‎Replaced by something harder.

‎— You should rest, she told her daughter.

‎Avery shook her head.

‎— No. Not this time.

‎The silence tightened between them.

‎I slowly stood from the chair.

‎— Lauren, she deserves to know.

‎Her gaze snapped toward me.

‎— She deserves to be safe.

‎— Lying to her isn't protecting her anymore.

‎Her jaw tightened.

‎— You don't get to decide that.

‎Avery looked between us, her eyes moving from one to the other.

‎She understood without understanding.

‎— Decide what? she asked.

‎Lauren moved closer to the bed.

‎She took Avery's hand.

‎Gently. Too gently.

‎— Nothing is going to happen to you that we can't handle.

‎A lie.

‎I saw it in her eyes.

‎Avery did too.

‎— Then why did I almost die? she asked.

‎The room seemed to grow colder.

‎Lauren took a deep breath.

‎— Because some things… should have stayed buried.

‎My gaze locked onto her.

‎That wasn't a reassuring answer.

‎It was a confession.

‎Avery slowly pulled her hand away from her mother's.

‎— Buried where?

‎Lauren hesitated.

‎Just for a second.

‎But Avery saw it.

‎I saw it.

‎And I realized the wall Lauren had spent years building had just cracked.

‎— This isn't the time, she finally said.

‎Avery clenched the bedsheets in her fingers.

‎— Then when?

‎Silence.

‎Lauren turned toward me.

‎In her eyes, there was no longer only anger.

‎There was fear.

‎Pure fear.

‎— Get out, Gabriel.

‎It wasn't a request.

‎It was an order.

‎I didn't move.

‎— No, Avery said.

‎One word.

‎Simple, but firm.

‎Final.

‎Lauren held her daughter's gaze.

‎Surprised.

‎But more than anything, challenged.

‎And for the first time in a very long time…

‎I saw that she was no longer certain she still had control.

‎---

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