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Chapter 5 - What's Lost Can Be Found

A week passed. It was the kind of week that didn't feel like time at all, just one long gray stretch where nothing moved forward and nothing went back. The house never recovered. It just kept standing, like something that had forgotten how to be a home. Lily barely spoke. The television stayed on through every empty room. Lights burned late into the night because no one wanted to sit in the dark.

And Zane learned to move through it. He got up. He ate when he remembered. He answered questions when people asked. The grief didn't leave. It just found a place inside him and stayed there, quiet and constant.

By the seventh day, the world expected him to go back. So he did.

The school gates looked exactly the same. Students moved in clusters, their voices blending into the usual noise of morning. People laughed. People argued. People lived their ordinary lives like nothing had happened.

Zane walked through the gates and felt like a stranger.

His black hair hung loose over his forehead, a little longer than before, brushing just above his eyes. His face looked older, or maybe just emptier. The brown skin of his hands seemed pale in the morning light, though he knew that was probably in his head. He kept his right hand tucked into his pocket, the black glove a new and deliberate weight against his fingers.

He didn't want to think about why he needed it.

"Ghost."

Marcus appeared beside him, slightly out of breath. His face held that careful expression people wore when they weren't sure if they should be happy to see you or worried.

"You actually came," Marcus said.

Zane shrugged. "Didn't have much of a choice."

Marcus looked at him for a second too long. His eyes dropped to the glove, then back up.

"New look?"

Zane slid his hand deeper into his pocket. "Something like that."

Marcus let it go. For once, he didn't push. Instead, his expression shifted into something almost eager, like he'd been holding onto news for days and couldn't keep it anymore.

"Bro, you missed a lot."

Zane exhaled softly. "I figured."

"No, I mean—" Marcus leaned in, lowering his voice. "It's that teacher."

Zane's steps slowed. "Mr. Cornell?"

"Yeah." Marcus nodded quickly. "He got it."

Zane frowned. "Got what?"

Marcus stared at him like he couldn't believe he was asking.

"The Nobel Prize."

Zane stopped walking.

The noise of the courtyard seemed to fade. Not completely, but enough that he could hear his own breathing.

"What?" he said quietly.

Marcus let out a breath. "Yeah. Apparently he submitted some breakthrough formula. They're saying it's huge. Military applications, all that. If the war keeps going, this could change everything."

Zane stood very still.

His mind went back to the classroom. The board. The equation he had stared at until it stopped being symbols and started being something else. The way his hand had moved without thinking. The silence afterward.

And the way Mr. Cornell had looked at him. Not surprised. Not grateful.

Recognizing.

"No," Zane muttered.

Marcus kept talking, too caught up in his own excitement to notice. "They've been interviewing him all week. News, papers, everything. He's not even here today. Probably off collecting awards or something."

Zane's hand curled inside his glove.

The equation had been untouched for years. For years. And then, minutes after Zane solved it, it belonged to someone else.

"He solved it," Zane said.

Marcus blinked. "Yeah. That's what I'm saying."

"No." Zane's voice came out quieter now. "He didn't."

A pause. Marcus frowned. "What are you talking about?"

Zane didn't answer. Because the realization wasn't dramatic. It didn't hit him like a wave. It just sat there, cold and still, like something that had been waiting for him to see it.

The classroom. The silence. The way Mr. Cornell had stared at the board. Not wonder. Not confusion.

Understanding. And then possession.

Zane had solved it. And Mr. Cornell had claimed it.

He let out a slow breath. "Nothing," he said finally.

Marcus studied him for a moment, unconvinced, but he let it go.

"Anyway," Marcus said, "the whole place has been weird since you left. People keep talking about you."

Zane glanced at him. "Why?"

Marcus scratched the back of his head, suddenly awkward. "You kind of disappeared in the middle of class, came back, solved something nobody understood, then vanished for days, and then your mom ended up on the news." He shrugged. "You're basically a conspiracy theory now."

Zane looked away. Of course he was.

Marcus nudged him gently. "Hey. People just talk. It doesn't mean anything."

Zane nodded. But his mind was already moving elsewhere.

His fingers curled inside the glove.

The mouse. The locker. His mother. And now this.

A pattern. He could feel it taking shape, even if he couldn't see it clearly yet. Things disappearing. And what remained being taken by people who didn't deserve it.

His jaw tightened.

He wasn't angry. Not yet. But something was forming in him, something that felt heavier than grief, sharper than confusion.

Because if what he was beginning to suspect was true, then nothing that had happened was an accident. And the world didn't know what was coming.

What was coming came anyway. And it wasn't what any of us was expecting. Especially you. You didn't see this coming. I bet you ten bucks.

The morning had settled into the usual rhythm. Mr. Patterson was explaining quadratic equations in the same flat voice he used for everything, his back half-turned to the class as he wrote on the board. Zane sat near the window, his gloved hand resting on the desk, watching the formulas appear without really seeing them.

The explosion came from nowhere.

It wasn't loud. It was louder than loud. It was the kind of sound that didn't travel through the air so much as replace it. The windows shook. The floor vibrated beneath their feet. A few students screamed. Most just froze.

Mr. Patterson dropped his marker. It bounced once, rolled under a desk, and no one moved to pick it up.

"What was that?" someone whispered.

The teacher walked to the window. His face, usually so unreadable, had gone pale. He stood there for a long moment, staring at something none of them could see.

Then everyone's phones started beeping at once.

The sound was relentless, a chorus of identical alerts stacking on top of each other until it became a single, urgent wall of noise. Zane pulled his phone from his pocket. The screen glowed red.

TSUNAMI WARNING. EVACUATE IMMEDIATELY.

He was on his feet before the words fully registered. His chair scraped against the floor. A few other students were moving now, but most were still sitting, still staring at their phones like the words would change if they looked long enough.

"Evacuate," Mr. Patterson said, his voice finally cutting through. "Now. Everyone to the upper floors. Go."

The class erupted into movement. Chairs scraping, bags forgotten, voices rising in panic. Zane pushed through the crowd, his heart already pounding, his mind already running ahead.

Lily. She was three floors down. Her classroom faced the courtyard. If the wave came from the east—

He didn't finish the thought. He just ran.

The stairwell was chaos. Students poured from every floor, some crying, some shouting, some just moving with the desperate silence of animals sensing danger. Zane fought against the current, forcing his way down while everyone else pushed up. Someone shoved him hard against the railing. He barely felt it.

"Lily!" he shouted, but his voice was swallowed by the noise.

He reached her floor just as the first alarms started wailing from outside. The sirens were different from the phone alerts. Louder. Deeper. The kind of sound that meant something real was happening.

He found her in the hallway, pressed against the lockers with a group of other students, all of them frozen. Her face was white. Her eyes were wide. She looked younger than she was, suddenly, like a child waiting for someone to tell her what to do.

"Lily."

She turned at his voice. Her face crumpled with relief. "Zane—"

"Come on." He grabbed her hand. "We need to go up. Now."

They made it to the stairwell before the wave hit.

The sound was different from the explosion. The explosion had been sharp, violent, a single moment of destruction. This was something else. This was the world groaning, a deep and ancient noise that seemed to come from everywhere at once. The building shuddered. The lights flickered. And then the windows on the ground floor exploded inward.

Water poured into the stairwell below them. It wasn't like the movies. It didn't rush and crash. It rose, fast and silent and absolute, swallowing everything in its path. The few students still on the lower steps screamed and scrambled upward. Zane pulled Lily higher.

The wave kept coming.

It wasn't supposed to reach this far. The school was inland, miles from the coast. But the water didn't care about what was supposed to happen. It filled the stairwell like a rising tide, climbing step by step, relentless and patient.

Something shifted above them. Zane looked up just as a shelving unit from one of the upper landings broke loose. It was metal, industrial, bolted to the wall for years until the building's groaning had finally pulled it free. It fell in slow motion, tilting forward, casting a long shadow across the stairs.

He pushed Lily against the wall. He tried to cover her. But the shelf was too wide, too heavy. It caught her shoulder, pinned her against the concrete. She cried out, a sharp sound that cut through the chaos, and then she was on the ground, trapped, her leg twisted beneath the metal frame.

"No no no—" Zane grabbed the shelf. It didn't move. He pulled again, harder, his muscles screaming, the metal biting into his hands even through the glove. It didn't move.

"Zane." Lily's voice was small. Scared. "Zane, it hurts."

He stopped pulling. He knelt beside her, his hands shaking, his breath coming in gasps. He looked at the shelf. At her leg. At the water rising slowly below them.

He couldn't move it. He couldn't move it.

"I'm going to get help," he said. "I'm going to find someone—"

"Don't." Her hand grabbed his wrist. Her grip was stronger than it should have been. "Don't leave me."

He looked at her face. The fear there. The trust. The way she was looking at him like he was the only thing keeping her from falling apart.

He sat down beside her.

The water kept rising. The sirens kept wailing. Somewhere above them, he could hear people shouting, running, the sounds of evacuation continuing without them. But the stairwell was emptying. The last of the students had climbed higher. The teachers had gone with them. The floor beneath them was emptying out, the chaos moving upward, leaving them behind.

Soon there was no one left. Just the two of them, and the water, and the silence that had settled between the waves.

Lily leaned her head against his shoulder. Her breathing was uneven. He could feel her trembling.

"Remember when I broke my arm?" she asked.

The question came out of nowhere. It was so ordinary, so human, that for a moment he forgot where they were.

"Which time?" he said.

"The first time. At the park. I was trying to climb that tree you said was too high."

"You fell out of it."

"I fell out of it." A small smile touched her lips. "Mom ran across the whole field with her coffee still in her hand. She didn't even realize she was still holding it until she tried to pick me up."

He remembered. His mother's face, pale with panic. The coffee spilling across the grass. The way she held Lily so tight she almost made it worse.

"She made you promise never to climb trees again," he said.

"She made you promise to watch me better."

"I did watch you."

"You were looking at your phone."

He almost laughed. It caught in his throat and came out as something else, something close to a sob. "Okay. Maybe I was looking at my phone."

The water was closer now. He could feel it against his shoes. Cold. Patient.

"Do you remember the beach?" Lily asked. Her voice was softer now. Tired. "The summer before Dad left. You built that sandcastle. The big one with the towers."

"It was terrible."

"It was perfect." She shifted against him, her hand finding his. "You spent all afternoon on it. And then the tide came in and washed it away. And you just stood there watching it. You didn't even get mad. You said it was okay because you knew how to build it now."

He squeezed her hand. "I was nine. I didn't know anything."

"You knew that things end. And that it's okay when they do." She paused. "I didn't understand that then. I cried for an hour."

"You cried for everything."

"I did not."

"You cried when that stray cat ran away from you."

"That cat was mean."

"He was just scared."

They were quiet for a moment. The water was at his ankles now. He could feel it soaking through his shoes, cold and heavy. He didn't look at it. He looked at her.

"Lily."

"Don't." Her voice cracked. "Don't say it's going to be okay."

"I wasn't going to."

"Good." She swallowed. "Because it's not okay. And I don't want you to lie to me. Not now."

He nodded slowly. "Okay."

She looked at him. Her eyes were wet, but she wasn't crying. Not yet. "Remember when you used to sneak into my room after nightmares? You'd sit on the floor next to my bed and tell me stories until I fell asleep."

"You told me to stop when I was twelve."

"I lied." A tear slipped down her cheek. "I always slept better when you were there."

He reached out and brushed the tear away with his thumb. His hand was shaking. He didn't know when that started.

"I'm here now," he said.

She smiled. It was small and broken and real. "I know."

The water was at their knees now. The cold was spreading upward, seeping through their clothes, making everything heavy. Above them, the building groaned again, a long, low sound like something waking up.

Zane looked toward the window at the end of the hallway. The glass was cracked, webbed with fractures. Through it, he could see the sky. Gray and endless. And beyond the sky, rising above the rooftops, a wall of water.

It was coming again. There was no running from it. No climbing high enough. No place left to go.

He didn't tell Lily. He didn't have to. She was looking too.

Her hand tightened around his.

"Zane," she whispered.

He turned to her. Her face was wet, but she wasn't looking at the wave anymore. She was looking at him.

"Tell me something," she said. "Something true."

He thought about it. The wave was close now. He could hear it, a low roar building in the distance, growing louder with every second.

"I'm scared," he said.

She nodded slowly. "Me too."

"I don't want to lose you."

"You won't." Her voice was steady. Stronger than it should have been. "You're right here."

The roar was getting louder. The building was shaking. Water was splashing up around them, the first spray of what was coming.

He pulled her closer. She leaned into him, her head against his chest, her arms wrapped around him like she was trying to hold him together.

"I love you," he said. His voice broke on the words. "I never said it enough. But I love you. You're my sister and I love you."

She was crying now. He could feel it against his shirt. "I know," she whispered. "I know, Zane. I love you too."

The wave filled the window. The glass shattered. Water poured toward them, dark and endless, filling the hallway, blocking out the light.

He closed his eyes. She closed hers. He held her as tight as he could, waiting for the cold, waiting for the end.

The impact never came.

Something changed. The air shifted. The roar of the wave, so loud it had drowned out everything else, suddenly sounded different. Wrong. Like it was being pulled apart.

Zane opened his eyes.

Light. Everywhere. White and gold and soft, filling the hallway like morning breaking through clouds. The wave was still there, but it wasn't moving. It hung in the air, frozen, suspended, and in the center of it stood something that didn't belong to this world.

It was a body made of light. Human-shaped but not human. It glowed from within, warm and constant, and as it moved, the wave parted around it like water around a stone. The smell of lilies filled the air. Sweet and clean and familiar, though he couldn't say why.

The light moved faster than thought. One moment it was in the wave. The next it was beside them. Arms of light wrapped around him and Lily, lifting them like they weighed nothing. The wall behind them shattered. Not from force, but from presence, as if the light had simply decided the wall shouldn't be there anymore.

Wind rushed past them. The building fell away. The water fell away. The whole world became a blur of gray and white, and then—

They were somewhere else. High up. A skyscraper, half-ruined, its windows blown out, its steel frame exposed to the sky. The city sprawled below them, drowning, dying, but here, in this empty floor, there was only silence. Only the two of them, and the light.

Zane tried to speak. To thank whoever—whatever—had saved them.

But the light was already fading. Shrinking. Pulling inward like a dying star. For a moment, it lingered, a soft glow in the center of the room, warm and gentle and so, so sad.

Then it was gone.

And Zane was left holding his sister on the floor of a broken building, the smell of lilies still in his hair, his heart still pounding, his mind still trying to understand what he had just seen.

Lily stirred in his arms. "Zane?" Her voice was small. Frightened. "What happened?"

He looked down at her. At her face, still wet with tears, still alive.

"I don't know," he said. And for the first time, the words didn't feel like a confession of failure. They felt like the beginning of something else. Something he didn't have a name for yet.

Outside, the water continued to rise. The city continued to drown. But they were alive. They were together.

And somewhere in the light that had saved them, in the smell of lilies that still clung to his skin, there was a question. A mystery. A truth waiting to be found.

He held his sister tighter and waited for the world to stop shaking.

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