The Empath (The Above and Beyond Series Book 1) (15 page)

BOOK: The Empath (The Above and Beyond Series Book 1)
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Renee pulled my face down to look at her. “If you haven’t noticed, we’re in the middle of a monsoon.” She stared into my eyes. “No river drowning for you.”

“But—”

“No.” Renee opened the door and pushed me down by my head until I sat. “No buts.” She picked up my legs and placed them into the car then turned to Skip. “She goes to the hospital and doesn’t leave until she’s been seen. Got it?”

“Yes, ma’am.”

“I’ll be there as soon as I can.” She knelt beside the car. “I won’t be long.”

“Promise?” My voice sounded feeble and pathetic.

Her eyes filled with gentle affection. “Promise.”

“Doctor Llys, get your ass over here. Now.”

She sighed at Frei’s bark and got to her feet.

“Coming.” She rolled her eyes. “There was a please in there somewhere, I’m sure.”

She shut the door and I heard her tap on the roof. The vehicle rumbled and bumped onto the road.

I shivered, feeling cold now I was away from her. I stared out the back window. Renee was striding toward Frei. I rubbed my arms, the bumps raising all the way along them. I hadn’t even realized it was raining. Now I was cold and so far beyond exhaustion that my brain felt as though I’d eaten too much candy. I knew that I wouldn’t be able to sleep even if I’d wanted to.

The lights of the town faded as the squad car headed out onto the highway. My heart ached with the loss of a friend as much as the horror he’d caused. Sam. I’d taken the sword that I’d been given and stabbed him so deep that he’d never recover from it.

Skip was silent. He kept his eyes focused on the road ahead as his radio hummed some kind of jazz tune. I looked in the rear-view mirror. The cloud was gone now, gone for good. But at what cost?

If this was winning, it sure as hell wasn’t the same as they showed in movies. I didn’t feel like I’d saved anyone. Instead, I’d just ripped out the only shred of humanity Sam had owned. I’d held his heart and crushed it.

That made me no better than him.

I felt something beside me and turned. I wasn’t alone in the back seat no more. Mari sat there and smiled, the wounds that Sam had inflicted on her faded before my eyes. Then Natalia appeared. I tensed, but she didn’t howl with rage or scream in agony. No, she smiled too. Then Darcy, then Chelsea, then Jenny, and finally Mrs. Casey. Each one of them nodded to me.

As they started to fade, my breath caught. Jake, little Jake Casey sat beaming at me, his eyes so full of hope, peace, and love. I burst into tears at the sight of him. It had been so long. He was just the same, just like I’d remembered him. He looked so . . . so . . . happy.

I reached out to touch him, his hand moved through mine. He giggled, oh how I missed that sound, and it lifted my heart. He wasn’t scared of Sam, he wasn’t chained by the cloud no more. I realized that was what I’d done for them all, I’d freed them, I’d set them free.

Jake held onto his mother’s hand and the others reappeared for just a moment, a brief affirming moment.

“Thank you,” they whispered in a strange slow slur. “Thank you.”

 

Chapter 78

 

RENEE WOKE UP and stared at a strong cup of black coffee under her nose. She looked up at Frei and nodded thanks. Her back creaked and cracked as she stretched. The sound of the beep, beep of the heart monitor soothed her.

When she had gotten to the hospital, she’d been told that Aeron had been taken into surgery. Thankfully, the procedure had been to reset her jaw and she’d suffered no head or neck injuries. Still, Renee hated the thought that Aeron would need metal in her mouth until it healed. She looked at Aeron’s bruised face and tried not to think how close Sam had come to harming her. 

“How is she?” Frei sat watching her from the other side of the room. Normally, she wouldn’t bother with hospital visits or even ask about a POI once they were done. Renee cocked her head. Maybe Miss Ice Queen herself had a soft spot for their little Missourian.

Breathing in the rich aroma, Renee smiled. Frei didn’t do cheap coffee. “Considering she was nearly strangled to death, fell off a dirt bike, and had her jaw smashed. She’s great.”

Frei frowned. “The op took a while. It should have been shorter.” She got up and took the charts off the end of Aeron’s bed. “Under observation for concussion.” She flicked through the pages. “Not surprising.”

Renee sipped the coffee, knowing Frei didn’t expect her to say anything.  

Frei tutted her way through the charts, returned to her seat, and picked up her coffee. “Lilia wants to know if you’re coming back.” She stared into the Styrofoam cup.

“She’s so clued up. Why doesn’t she tell me?” Lilia and Frei had played her, they’d used her fears and weaknesses. She’d thought of Lilia as a mentor, a hero, and Frei, hell Frei was meant to be the closest thing she had to a friend. How could they do that to her?

“You know it doesn’t work like that.” Frei stretched out her shoulders and glanced at Aeron as the machine beep missed a beat. “Besides, you knew I was on your side.”

Renee sighed. Did she? No doubt Frei had helped her out in city hall and had no doubt backed her up by ordering an SOS. It was an order they almost never used. Sam, even as dangerous as he was, didn’t warrant it. An SOS was bordering national security level. “Did I?”

“I don’t do nice.” She sipped at her coffee. “But, I’ll always have your back.”

From Frei that was a glowing stamp of approval. Renee took a long drink from her cup to hide her smile. “Did you get the evidence on Sara?”

Frei twitched her eyebrows in a “You think?” look. “Apart from the very public confession?” She nodded. “Her husband gave us everything we needed. He’d bought a van for the deliveries but it had been stolen.” The corner of her lips twitched. “Or so Sara said. It was pretty much covered in both their DNA.”

Aeron had nearly been framed for it all. Sam had nearly completed a perfect plan. Renee watched Frei sit there like she was on guard duty—the woman never seemed to sleep or tire or get emotional about anything. Oddly, she found that comforting. Frei was always Frei—stoic, cold, efficient. A machine. A dependable machine. “How did you know it was him?”

No matter how Renee had tried to figure it out, she couldn’t understand how the CIG team had gone from thinking Aeron was the Unsub to the truth. “Nine-eight-four.” Frei’s tone told her that, no doubt, someone felt her wrath. “We found his badge on the floor. It was his number.”

Renee closed her eyes. “Why didn’t the team look at that?”

“They did.” Frei drained her cup. “But Sam Casey had an alibi for every murder.”

Renee snapped her eyes open. “Who?”

Frei crushed the cup in her hand, her blue eyes sparking. “Sara, and his mother.”

Renee looked at Aeron who was still out from the anesthetic. “And Jake’s death?”

“I got our forensics on it, and Sam pretty much confessed to the whole thing.” She nodded. “Aeron’s a free woman.”

Renee smiled and leaned back in her chair. “About freaking time.”

“Now we just have to convince her to join us.” Frei’s matter-of-fact tone didn’t make it any less jarring.

“What?” Were they completely unhinged? Aeron? Why would she want to join them? They’d thought she was capable of murdering young girls for a start.

Frei gave Renee one of
those
looks that normally meant “duh?” “Why do you think Lilia took a back seat?” Frei got up and walked out of the room.

Renee stared after her. Was she serious?

How much she wanted Aeron to join her in CIG—her heart thudded at the thought—but what if Aeron didn’t want that? She’d been through so much. She had to come to terms with so much. What right did they have to demand she join the cause too?

Being part of CIG wasn’t something a person did for an easy life, or
any
life at all. It was an unnoticed, unappreciated endless battle to help, stop, or rescue people from events that hadn’t even happened yet.

For Renee it had been a conscious decision, knowing all that it entailed—well, most of it—but then if all she’d seen in recent months hadn’t convinced her that no one held all the pieces of the puzzle, she wasn’t sure what would.

Renee brushed the hair from Aeron’s forehead. She was such a hero, such a pure-hearted soul—Renee sighed—and she was in way over her head.

She sat back, careful not to wake Aeron, and pulled a crumpled envelope from her pocket.
Dr. Serena Llys—No peeking, Shortstop.
She smiled at it and pulled out the letter from Nan.
 
Dear Renee,
(an’ yes, I sure as shoots know who you are.)
Now I know that you ain’t used to things not being logic and reason but I know that you got the gray cells to get what I’m telling you in this note.
My Shortstop is real special and I know that you got it bad for her. I ain’t the worldly sort but I know what I seen in my visions. We both know that the dimwit ain’t got one iota of how she feels and after everything is all tied up an’ toasted, she’s gonna need some time to figure out that she ain’t made of stone.

You got to give her that time to realize she has a place in the world, that she is important. She’s got to figure it out all on her own. She’s got to learn she is worthwhile again. Careful how you handle her though, cos she’s got a lot going on in that dimwitted head and if you say too much, she’ll just bolt like her mother.
 

Renee skipped over the section where Nan talked about the storms and the murders. She’d read and re-read the note a thousand times since Aeron had given it to her and every time it had given her goose bumps. Here was a woman that she had never met talking to her through words like she was an old friend.

At first, the letter had terrified her. She’d ignored the rest and focused on the storms, on the murders, on something she could grasp but over the nights locked in with Aeron after the tornado—and every one since—she had turned to the words to help keep her steady and strong.

Nan even talked about after, about now. At first Renee hadn’t understood but today as she sat there, listening to Aeron’s steady breathing, the words spoke to her so deeply and she would cling to them—in hope—that Nan was right.
 
Now, when Shortstop has realized her gifts mean she can’t just sit an’ play her fiddle all day, everything is gonna change in her world an’ yours.
It ain’t gonna be easy and I can tell you clear as crystal that it ain’t gonna be smooth but you know better than for me to tell you that your paths are as twisted together as a wicker basket.
So, just stick with it—an’ her—an’ you’ll get there.
You’re a good ’un an’ I know you’ll listen, so take care of my Shortstop cos she’s real precious to me.

Nan xxx
 

Renee smiled at the words and wiped a tear from her eye. God, she hoped it would all work out but she really couldn’t see how Aeron would want to join CIG, an organization that would steal the very freedom she’d just secured.

Renee tried not to worry, tried to keep faith that somehow Aeron might realize, might feel
something
. She turned over the letter to put it back in the envelope and spotted a line of text she hadn’t seen before.
 

PS: I couldn’t have picked anyone better to protect her myself. So quit fretting already.
 

“Thank you,” Renee whispered to the empty room, “that means a lot.”

A gust swept around her. Renee looked up and saw that the windows and door were shut tight and for the first time it didn’t scare her.

Renee continued to watch Aeron sleep. The beep of the heart monitor as steady as a clock ticking. If there was one thing she’d learned, it was to trust in the things she couldn’t see.

 

Chapter 79

 

BILL MARCHED INTO the town hall and was pretty pleased with the turnout. He wasn’t sure how much he could rally everyone and he, Kay, and Jim had worked tirelessly to convince the town. It had taken some doing, even though Aeron should be hailed as a hero.

Bill figured if she’d been in the military, she would have more medals than space but the townsfolks’ minds weren’t easily changed.

Bill glanced at Mary who sat begrudgingly with their son on her lap. She was sucking lemons at the moment but after what she did to Aeron, she could scowl and mutter all she liked. He knew she would too. One thing about the daft crow he knew was that she loved him, same as he loved her. So Mary would do what it took to climb back out of the mutt house and into his affections again.

“Y’know why you’re here, so I’ll cut straight to the point,” he began in his best impression of a politician. “We messed up big time and it’s up to us to set it right.”

“She brought it on herself,” Mrs. Stein heckled from the back.

Bill folded his arms. “Ain’t you in church every Sunday?”

“Sure am,” she yelled back.

He opened his arms out to the crowd. “Then you been sleepin’ through the whole thing?”

The crowd laughed and Mrs. Stein muttered darkly but shut up.
There’s a first time for everything
, Bill thought.

“Now, you seen the plans and I know a lot of you are strugglin’ yourselves at the moment.”

“That’s talking pretty light,” one of the guys yelled.

“You can say that again,” another added.

Bill raised up his hands. “I know, but we can do this.” He summoned his best grin. “And maybe, if we work together, we can fix ourselves up as we go?”

There were a few skeptical looks, a few “no way am I doin’ that,” and a few nods. It was a start at least.

“Where we gonna get the money from?” someone called out.

Bill looked at the doorway. Agent Black had introduced him to Lilia a couple of days ago. Agent Black had said that Lilia waltzing in would give them the answers they needed. Bill wasn’t sure how but after seeing Aeron at work, he was good as ready to believe anything.

“Ma’am?” He held out his arm to welcome her and Lilia strode out onto the stage. Some people gasped and stared at her wide-eyed. Bill wondered if some movie star had just wandered onto stage. He furrowed his brow, she did look kinda familiar. There was something about her that made him feel like he’d met her already.  

“I don’t need introductions. So I’ll make this clear.” Her tone was warm but pretty clear she wasn’t fooling around. “As all your properties are on my land, I’ll foot the bill.”

Bill folded his arms across her chest. She had a pretty neat ride and some kind of fancy clothing.
No shootin’,
he thought.
She owns the damn place.
 

“On one condition . . .” Lilia looked at Bill.

He rubbed his crew cut. “What condition is that, ma’am?”

Mrs. Stein barged forward, her eyes as scrunched up and mean looking as always. “You show your face and think we’ll just forget you ran off and left.”

Lilia’s smile made Bill feel a little warm all over as she peered down at the dotty old bat. “Yes, Aunt Gertie. I do.”

He opened his mouth, then closed it, then opened it again. Huh? “She’s related to you?”

Lilia smiled at him and squeezed his shoulder. “For my sins.” She turned back to the crowd. “The condition is this. All the houses will be designed and built to withstand storms. If your property is near the river, we can work around it so you’re not getting flooded every year.”

“You rolling in it?” someone called. “ ’Cause I ain’t seen no gold.”

The crowd agreed. Bill had to too. It sounded like it would cost a pretty penny. Sure, she looked pretty rich but enough to fund the whole of the repairs?

With a knowing smile, she seemed to charm everybody in the room. “Now I’ve recuperated the money the mayor has been embezzling. That will more than cover your expenses.”

He what? Bill scowled. The Casey men were a sure-fire pain in the ass. What a load of crooks. First Sam, then his father.
Good freakin’ riddance
.

Kay stood up and Lilia smiled at her warmly.

“Ma’am, I don’t really know who you are.” Kay shrugged. “But you sure as hell look like Aeron.”

Several people laughed. Bill and Kay looked at each other in confusion. What was so funny?

Kay cleared her throat. “See, Aeron . . . well . . . She kinda promised the Toughtons—”

“That she would pay for his operation?” Lilia said in a soft voice

 Kay’s face softened and she nodded. She motioned to Frank and Maggie Toughton. Maggie took Frank’s hand, her eyes intense. Bill wasn’t sure how Aeron could help nobody with money. It wasn’t like she was rich or nothing. Why had she promised it?

“Aeron will keep her promise.” Lilia held Kay’s eyes. “And I will pay for Jim to see that specialist she suggested.”

“You will?” Kay just stood there, blinking at her.

Lilia smiled and Bill couldn’t help but smile with her. The woman was like a warm summer’s day.

“The Lorelei family always keep their word.”

Bill finally twigged. “Damn, you’re her mom?” That’s why she was so familiar. “Figures.”

The crowd chuckled and he took that moment to rally them. “So who’s with me?”

The roar of affirmation was so loud that Mrs. Stein covered her ears.

 

Chapter 80

 

I CAME AROUND feeling like my jaw had been set in concrete and spent most of that week sucking my food through a straw. Renee had been in the room with me most of the time, and I’d had to pretty much force her to go and get some rest. I knew that she was trying to keep me from thinking too much. Thinking ’bout Sam, thinking ’bout all he’d done. Thing was, I blamed myself. There was nothing she could really say that would make that any better. No matter how much she tried, no amount of words would really heal the wounds he’d inflicted because of me.

One thing that kept me from needing a permanent visit to Serenity was my father. He was up and about, his leg set and his throat healing. He was lucky not to have snapped his neck, Renee told me. I was thankful for that thick ol’ rind of his for the first time. 

He’d been in to see me a few times but as he could only croak and I wasn’t much better, we’d sat in silence. The only time he had spoken, he’d told me he was sorry. Sorry that he’d never said nothing about Lilia and sorry that he’d messed up so bad. I’d tried to tell him that it weren’t his fault but I guessed we had come out of the same tree and if I was feeling responsible, nothing I said would make him feel no different.

Seeing his injuries made me want to hate Sam. I wasn’t sure why I didn’t but I couldn’t, same as Sara. Sure, I hated what they did—I really hated it—but hate them? I guess I just wasn’t capable of it.

So, with nothing better to do, I sat there stewing, staring out at the top of a green tree and trying to block out the nurses’ aching feet, an elderly lady’s desperation as she tried to find her dentures, and the woman next door’s infatuation with the junior doctor. Good thing I’d been in a mental institution already or I would have thought I was crazy.

The door opened and I lifted myself up ready to give Renee an ear-bashing for not resting. I stared at a woman in my doorway.

She was me, or an older, more ladylike version at least. Even the hair. That’s why my father couldn’t bear to look at me. We were like clones. Heck, I was so much like Lilia that it was a mirror image. Sure, it was a freaky funhouse mirror but wow, it was unreal.

“Can I come in?” she asked, hovering in the doorway.

I shrugged. My brain warred with my heart. I mean, this was my mother, my real mother, the woman who gave me life, the one who I was bonded to in gifts and some pretty strong genes. But she was my
absent
mother. She weren’t my mom. She was just somebody I had known nothing about, a mother who had abandoned me and sat back while I went through hell, alone. Renee had said she saw stuff, so did she know? Had she seen what damage her running off had done? Could she see how much it had crushed my father?

Still darkening the doorway, she hesitated. “Your jaw looks better.”

I shrugged again. I hadn’t seen my jaw. To me it was twice the size of Blackbear and not half as pretty.

This woman, this stranger, walked in and sat in the visitor chair. “When you were a child, I saw something that forced me into a choice.” She stared out of the window. “I could either ignore it, stay with the family I loved.” She met my eyes. “And I still adore.” She flicked her eyes away again. “Or I could stop the horrific from happening.”

I cleared my throat, which felt like I’d swallowed a cactus. Talking weren’t easy with the metal in my jaw. “Renee said you stop things happening.”

“Not quite,” Lilia said. “I learned long ago that I must never tamper with fate, only heed its warnings.”

I looked down at my hands, picked at my fingers, wondering how much I’d see if I touched her, how much she had held back from me. Would I finally see the truth?

“That’s what the group does. I see a person who is instrumental in an event—”

“The center of the storm?” Trying not to glare at her, I picked away. Norah had picked back in the institution. I had told her off for it so many times. Had Lilia seen that? Had she let me spend over a decade of my life in there and done nothing?

“The center of the storm, yes. I’m not sure what they are doing there, or why.” She was trying to catch my eye but I didn’t want to look at her. “But I know that they are either the cause, the victim, or the one who breaks its grip.”

It sounded about as useful as my gifts were. It sounded like she was grasping in the dark. I didn’t like it. Going in blind and messing around with folks’ lives didn’t seem right or fair.

“That’s what the CIG team does.” She leaned forward, crossing her legs all ladylike. Guess we weren’t clones in mannerisms. “Renee protects the person while the others try to discern what role they play and what will happen.”

It sounded dumb, even if Renee was a hero. What was she doing with those people? “May as well hang seaweed out to predict rain.”

My mother met my eyes, I expected her to argue but she smiled. I was irritated with myself for responding to it. One, ’cause it hurt like hell to smile and two, ’cause she didn’t deserve a smile. “That’s why we need someone who can read people.”

I lay my head back and closed my eyes. This must be some kind of a delusion. Mothers, even long lost ones who’d just up and left, would maybe engage in small talk or ask forgiveness.

But no. Here was my mother, my betraying, abandoning, lying mother sitting in my room and trying to guilt me into being what? Another her? “I don’t mess with stuff. I’m done seeing.” That sounded like I was in kindergarten.

“It doesn’t work like that, Aeron.”

Uh uh, she didn’t get to use that “I’m your mother” tone with me. No way. Iris had tried it and gotten nowhere, like hell was Lilia. “Doesn’t it? The only thing I’m planning on doin’ is gettin’ in the car with Renee and heading the hell out of here.” I glared at her. “An’ as far away from you as I can get.”

I wasn’t shocked by the bitterness in my voice but I was shocked at how much I wanted to hurt my mother back. At how much I wanted her to feel all she’d put me and my father through.

“Renee will be back at work as soon as I ask her to be,” she said. Curt, cutting, and pretty much like Frei. Who the hell did these people think they were?

“She promised me.” I folded my arms. Renee would do like she promised. She would. She said so. 

My mother smiled again, like I hadn’t snapped at all. “Renee is an agent first, and above everything else.”

Short of sticking my fingers in my ears to block her out, I made do with picking the blanket. “No, Renee ain’t. Did you miss that part? Miss the bit where she is desperate to see her mom?” I hung on the word mom, just so she realized what real mom’s made their kids feel. “Do you know that she has been so many people that she doesn’t know who the hell she is no more?” These people didn’t care about nobody and I didn’t want Renee nowhere near them.

Lilia tilted her head. “Renee is a wonderful agent and an incredible woman.” She ran her nails over her skirt and picked strands off it. “That’s our problem. We don’t have anyone like you. You see through covers and lies, you see the truth. I see pictures of the future.”

Yeah right. “You see a bunch of symbols and try to figure out what they mean.”

She sighed. “We’re a lot more alike than you realize—”

“We ain’t nothing alike.”

She reached across the bed and touched my hand.

I didn’t want to leave, I would have given anything, but I could see them, feel the fear, the screams, I couldn’t ignore it . . . Dan listened to me. He headed off to his people . . . they were waiting on the tracks, the medics at the ready when the train left it. I had the choice . . . let them live or die . . . but I’d seen it for a reason.

Telling Dan meant I had to leave, I had to leave my baby, my love . . . I had to go far away from them, never tell them, never contact them. I had to watch him marry other women, watch my baby in someone else’s arms. The only person who really knew where I was, Nan, vowed never to speak another word as it broke her heart in two.

I had to . . . I made that choice. I stand by that choice.

“I don’t expect you, or your father, to ever forgive me.”

I was reeling. I could see the vision she’d had, like mine but of the future. She’d been terrified and it had driven her almost to madness. Telling my father’s best friend, a man who she knew worked for CIG, had been the biggest risk of her life. She’d risked everything, but on that train, hurtling off the track was a young man. That man had made a breakthrough in science. That breakthrough had saved hundreds of thousands of lives around the world.

She’d done it to save lives. Would I have done that? Would I have left? What the hell kind of a curveball was that for life to throw at you? “Why couldn’t you say nothing?”

Eyes still locked on the imaginary fluff she was picking off her skirt, she sighed. “The people I see. Persons of Interest—”

“Yeah, I heard Renee mention POIs.”

My mother smiled. “Well, they can be anyone, from someone important to the future of society, a mass murderer, a criminal, or a normal average everyday person who just happens to do something extraordinary.”

“It’s nice to know I was under the murderer marker . . . thanks,
Mom
.”

My mother shook her head. “I never believed you would harm another soul for a second. If I thought you would, Renee would not have approached you.”

Not sure if I bought that. I narrowed my eyes at her. “I thought she was a rough and tough agent.”

My mother’s nod was so enthusiastic that I couldn’t help but smile. Darn it. “Oh, she is.” Her gaze drifted to the window again. “But I made a mistake once and she will live with the scars for the rest of her life. Never again.”

My stomach did a back flip into my throat. “Scars?”

“I want you to think about what I have said.” Her changes of subject sure as shoots weren’t subtle. “Aeron, you could save more lives than you realize.”

Two could play at that. “Have you spoken to Dad?” Take that one. Hah.

She shook her head, her eyes narrowed. “No, and I won’t either.” Her lips twitched in a smile. “I can’t until I know what you’re going to do.”

Oh that was sneaky, throw it out there and wait for the bite. “Why?”

Again, a smile, a challenge in her eyes. “I’m not going to tell you.”

I grabbed her hand. The truth hit me like a crowbar. In short, if I didn’t go, my mother would have to stay with the team. If I didn’t go, my father and my half-sisters would have to go it alone.

“I thought you weren’t using your gifts anymore?”

Sneaky, conniving . . . “I don’t get why.” Why couldn’t she see them? Folks knew who she was in Oppidum. “I don’t understand.”

“We’re dealing with fate, with nature.” Her eyes sparkled with her belief in the cause. “I believe we’re being guided, I truly do, but the team, no matter how skilled, they can’t go it alone.” Her sad smile said it all. “One of us needs to be there.”

What the heck kinda use would I be? “But I can’t see the future.”

Again her eyes narrowed.

I folded my arms. “Can’t.”

She pursed her lips. She had perfected the “You’re not being truthful, are you?” look that Nan had worn so often. “You
can
but not like me. I will still give you the cases but from here.”

That gave me a lot of choice. “So, you’ll stay, raise the girls?”

“I missed out on you, so yes.” It sounded like she meant it, the truth even shimmered from her but I still found it hard to believe.

I looked out of the window. “And Dad?”

Her aura lit up as she smiled. I guessed she felt as lost without him as he had without her. “I’ll make sure he never worries again. Promise.”

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