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THE MOUNTAIN

Author: Amira Lords
last update publish date: 2026-07-16 21:27:38

CHAPTER NINE: 

He didn't answer her question. Instead, he set his glass down and walked toward the hallway, and after a moment, Lyra followed.

The photographs lined both walls, floor to ceiling in places, more than she'd counted on her first pass through the house. Winter light on bare rock. A summer haze softening the peaks to something almost gentle. One frame, older than the rest, slightly yellowed, showing the mountain from a distance with a house at its base — small, wooden, smoke curling from a chimney.

Dimitri stopped in front of that one.

"I grew up there," he said. "At the base of that mountain. Not here. Not in this life."

Lyra hadn't expected him to just give it to her. She stayed quiet, the way she'd learned to stay quiet with nervous vendors who needed silence to keep talking.

"There was a house," he said. "My mother kept a garden that never should have grown anything, not at that altitude, but she made it work anyway. Stubborn, the way you're stubborn." His eyes didn't leave the photograph. "I had a brother. Younger. Eight years, and he followed me everywhere like it was a job he'd been assigned."

"Had," Lyra said quietly. Not a question. Just marking the word, the way he'd said it.

Dimitri's jaw tightened. For a moment she thought he'd stop there, the way he'd stopped everywhere else — a door opened an inch and then pulled shut before she could see through it.

"I won't talk about the rest," he said. "Not because I don't trust you. Because I've never said it out loud to anyone, and I don't know what will happen to me if I start."

It wasn't a refusal. It was something rawer than that, and Lyra recognized it because she'd worn that exact sentence herself, in the months after her mother left, when people asked gentle questions she couldn't answer without coming apart in front of them.

"Okay," she said, and meant it.

Something in him loosened at that — not much, but enough that she felt it, the way you feel a held breath finally released in a room. He looked at her instead of the photograph, and for the first time since the courthouse, Lyra saw something in his face that wasn't calculation. It was closer to grief. It looked strange on him, like a language he'd forgotten how to speak fluently.

"You didn't push," he said.

"I know what it costs to be pushed before you're ready."

He studied her for a long moment, and the space between them — the careful, measured distance he kept at all times, the distance of a man who'd built a life on never being caught without an exit — closed by half a step. Not dramatic. Just true.

"My father used to say the mountain never forgets what happens on it," Dimitri said. "I used to think that was superstition. Now I think he just meant that some things follow you regardless of how far you run."

"Is that why you keep the pictures? So you don't forget either?"

"I keep the pictures," he said, "because forgetting felt like losing them twice."

Lyra didn't know what to say to that, so she didn't say anything. She just stood there in the hallway with him, close enough now that she could see the old scar on his jaw catch the light differently, close enough to understand that whatever wall he'd built around himself had a door in it after all — small, unmarked, and open right now, for her, in a way she suspected it hadn't been open for anyone in a very long time.

"Thank you," she said finally. "For telling me that much."

"I didn't tell you anything." His voice had gone quiet, almost rough. "I told you there was a house. A garden. A brother. I didn't tell you what happened, and someday I will, but not tonight."

"Someday's fine," Lyra said, and was surprised to find she meant that too.

They stood there a moment longer, the photographs of silent witnesses on either side, the whole house still around them the way it did late at night when even the staff had finally stopped moving through the halls. Lyra thought, unbidden, of her father's matchbook, of the phone wrapped in a burned dish towel sitting in a drawer in her room upstairs, and felt the small, cold guilt of a secret she still hadn't handed over.

She almost told him then. The words were right there, close enough to reach — there's a phone, there's a number, my father was talking to someone the night he died — and for one full second she believed she was going to say it.

Then, from her jacket pocket, the burner phone buzzed.

Not her real phone. She'd brought it downstairs without meaning to, transferred out of habit from one jacket to another, and now it sat against her hip vibrating once, twice, a low insistent hum that felt impossibly loud in the silence of that hallway.

Dimitri's eyes went to her pocket immediately. Sharp. Alert. The stillness she'd learned to read as dangerous.

"What is that?" he asked, and his voice had changed entirely — no longer soft, no longer a man standing in front of a photograph of his childhood. This was the other version of him, the one she'd married without knowing, cold and precise and already calculating.

Lyra's hand closed around the phone in her pocket, feeling it buzz a third time against her palm.

Unknown number.

She thought of the last message on that screen — it's done, tell him it's finished, tell him I'm out — and of a person on the other end who had never written back, who might be writing back right now, this second, while Dimitri watched her face for the answer she hadn't decided to give him yet.

"Nothing," she said, and didn't take the phone out of her pocket. "Wrong number."

She watched him decide whether to believe

her.

She didn't answer the call.

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