LOGINDownstairs Damian had already been informed.He didn’t react immediately. Not outwardly.He just sat there. Still. Processing. Then he wheeled himself toward the staircase.Slow.By the time Sera came down again, he was already there.Waiting.She stopped mid step when she saw him.Of course.He wasn’t going to let this happen quietly.Nikolai lingered behind her, unsure.“…You’re leaving,” Damian said.Not a question. A statement.Sera nodded. “Yes.”“Why?”“Because it’s the best option.”“For who?”“For me.”That landed.Damian’s gaze didn’t waver. “And the treatment?”“Continues at the facility.” Her voice was calm. Prepared. “I’ll come in every day.”“You won’t stay.”“No.”Silence.Then Damian leaned forward slightly. “You don’t have to do this.”Sera’s fingers tightened slightly around the handle of her bag. “Yes, I do.”“No, you don’t.”“Yes.”Her voice sharpened just a little. “I do.”He studied her. Carefully. Trying to read what she wasn’t saying. Because this, this wasn’t j
Two days later, the air inside the rehabilitation room felt different. Like something was waiting to happen.Even the machines seemed quieter, as if they were holding their breath with everyone else.Sera stood at her usual position, tablet in hand, but her focus wasn’t scattered this time. It was sharp. Grounded. The storm from the previous session had passed, but it had left something behind in her.Caution.Precision.No room for error.“Nikolai,” she said without looking up, “final calibration.”Nikolai nodded seriously, fingers moving across the console with surprising steadiness for someone his age.“I reduced the feedback surge limiter,” he explained. “It’ll smooth the signal when he transitions to full weight.”Sera glanced at the screen. Then at him. A small nod. “Good.”Across the room, Damian was already secured in the harness again. But today, there was something different about him too.He rolled his shoulders slightly, exhaling slowly as he looked at the setup. Then at S
A second later, Adrik stepped out. And this time Damian didn’t move away.He stayed. Right there. In the open.Their eyes met instantly.No words.None needed.Because everything that needed to be said was already understood.Adrik’s gaze was sharp. Unyielding. Protective.Damian’s, colder. Darker. Possessive in a way he hadn’t allowed himself to feel in years.No masks. No pretense.Just two men standing in the aftermath of something neither of them could ignore anymore.Adrik took a step forward. Slow. Deliberate.Damian didn’t move. Didn’t blink. Didn’t soften.For a brief moment the air between them felt like it could snap.Then..Adrik stopped.Close enough.Not close enough to touch.Just enough to make the point.His jaw tightened slightly.Damian’s fingers tapped once against the wheel.Tick.Neither spoke. Because if they did it wouldn’t stay controlled.Adrik’s gaze flicked briefly in the direction Sera had gone. Then back to Damian.A silent warning. Clear. Unmistakable.St
For a moment everything went still. Not the room. Just her.Sera stood there, staring at Adrik like he had just shifted the ground beneath her feet… and expected her to walk like nothing changed.“I love you, Sera.”The words lingered. Heavy. Unavoidable.She opened her mouth then closed it again.Nothing came out.Because what was she supposed to say to that?Her mind felt… blank. Not empty.Just overwhelmed.Too many thoughts crashing into each other at once.Too many truths she wasn’t ready to look at.Adrik didn’t look away.Didn’t take it back.Didn’t soften it.He meant it.Every word.And that made it worse.Sera swallowed, her fingers curling slightly at her sides.“…Adrik…”His name came out quieter than she intended.Careful. Like she was trying not to break something fragile. Or maybe, like she already knew she would.He didn’t interrupt. Didn’t rush her.Just waited.And that patience?That steadiness?It made her chest tighten in a way she didn’t like. Because he deserved
The corridor outside the treatment wing felt too quiet. Too clean. Too… normal.Like nothing had just happened.Sera walked fast. Her heels clicked sharply against the polished floor, each step echoing louder than it should.She needed space.Distance.Air.Her mind was still running through the session.Frame by frame.Command by command.Where did it go wrong?Where did she go wrong?She pushed open the door to a smaller diagnostics room and stepped inside, immediately moving to the system console.Logs.She needed logs.Cold data.Something that didn’t feel.Didn’t accuse.Didn’t look at her the way they all just had.Her fingers moved quickly across the interface.Pulling records.Replaying sequences.Her eyes scanned everything.Behind her, the door opened again.She didn’t turn.“…I said I needed space.”Adrik stepped in anyway.“And I said I wasn’t leaving you like this.”The door closed softly behind him.Sera exhaled slowly. Still not turning. “I’m working.”“No, you’re runni
“Stabilize him!” Sera shouted.“Now!”The system finally cut.Silence crashed into the room.Heavy.Deafening.Sera’s hands moved quickly, checking his pulse.Weak.But there.“Come on…” she whispered under her breath.“Come on…”Her chest tightened painfully.“Don’t do this.”Behind her Adrik stood still. Watching.And in that moment..He knew.Not from logic.Not from words.But from the way she looked at him.The way her hands trembled.The way her voice broke.The way her entire world narrowed down to one man in that bed.He had lost.Not officially.Not completely.But enough.Enough to feel it.Deep.Unavoidable.Sera pressed her forehead briefly against Damian’s hand.Just for a second.A silent, desperate plea. Then...A breath.Rough.Uneven.Damian’s chest moved.“…kh..”A faint sound escaped him.Sera’s head snapped up.“Damian?!”His fingers twitched slightly.Another breath. Weak. But real.The room exhaled all at once.“He’s responding!”“Vitals stabilizing!”Nikolai cri
A guard stepped forward uncertainly. “Ma’am, please lower your voice.”Lysandra rounded on him. “Do you know who I am?”“Yes,” he said carefully. “And this is still a hospital.”Sera didn’t smile. Didn’t gloat. She simply watched Lysandra unravel.“You think you’re important because you wear black
Consciousness came back to Damian in pieces.First, pain.Not sharp. Not sudden. Just everywhere. A deep, bone heavy ache that made it feel like his body had been broken down and poorly reassembled. Breathing hurt. Existing hurt.Then light.Blinding. White. Merciless.It pierced through his closed
She sat there for a long time, listening to distant traffic, to birds she didn’t remember missing, to the steady beat of her own heart slowly calming itself.She stood eventually, shoulders squaring, tears dried but eyes still bright with unshed emotion.She wasn’t that girl anymore.Just as Sera s
“What..” someone whispered.“Pulse!” a nurse shouted suddenly. “He has a pulse!”Sera sucked in a broken breath, disbelief slamming into her chest.Again.Beep.Stronger this time.Louder.Alive.“Vitals returning,” another voice said, stunned. “Heart rhythm stabilizing, how...”Sera didn’t stop.S







