Eve
Montegue exhaled slowly, as if weighing the consequences of what he was about to allow. "Very well," he said. "But only for a mont. Just long enough to confirm what you feel is true."
"I don't need a mont," I murmured, brushing Elliot's curls from his forehead. "I need him."
They didn't argue again.
A wheelchair was brought in with quiet urgency, sleek and silver, far more elegant than the ones from mortal hospitals. Lucinda tried to guide toward it, but I shook my head.
"Just give a second," I said, legs trembling beneath . "I want to try."
Elliot tightened his grip on like he was afraid I would slip through his fingers again.
Lucinda held out her arms gently. "Let carry him for now."
To my surprise, Elliot allowed it. His eyes never left mine.
I took a slow, bracing step. Then another. My legs still felt foreign, like sothing borrowed from soone else, but I reached the chair, and I sat—less out of weakness now, and more because I had sowhere to go.
Montegue walked beside as the aides began to push the chair forward.
The hallways outside the infirmary were quiet but humming—cold, sterile lights blinking overhead.
The hallway fell away into silence as the containnt chamber lood ahead. Everyone slowed.
I didn't wait.
Before they could stop —before protocol could speak—I gripped the wheels of the chair myself and pushed forward.
The air in the chamber was colder, heavier. Hades lay at the center, motionless, a tangle of shadow and flesh laid bare on a reinforced slab.
He looked broken. But not defeated.
I rolled the chair beside him, the tal groaning softly under my urgency.
Everyone stood back—Montegue, Lucinda, the aides—watching.
But I saw only him.
My hand rose instinctively, trembling, reaching for the face I had morized in dreams and mory and madness.
"Hades," I breathed, brushing my fingers over his cheek. His skin was warm. Not burning, not cold.
Alive.
"He hasn't moved," Kael behind whispered, pulling himself away from the corner where he stood. "Not once in the two weeks since the purge. No eye flicker, no sound. Not even a breath too deep."
But just as he spoke—
A twitch.
So slight I thought I imagined it.
His fingers, resting limp beside him, shifted barely—like a muscle spasm or a phantom response. My breath hitched, but I said nothing. Not yet.
Kael must've seen it too, because his voice faltered. "That… wasn't happening before."
I leaned closer, my hand still on Hades' cheek. The stubble along his jaw felt real. Familiar. My thumb traced over it slowly.
"Co on," I whispered. "I know you're in there."
No response.
Stillness again.
Then—another movent. His brow twitched. Like sothing far beneath the surface stirred. No grand awakening. No gasping inhale or sudden jolt.
Just… resistance. The kind that said a soul was crawling back uphill.
His eyelids fluttered—not opening, not fully—but reacting.
Like my voice reached a part of him buried deep, buried far.
"He hears you," Kael murmured, stepping closer, but I barely noticed him.
I pressed my forehead gently against Hades'. Closed my eyes. Let the silence stretch.
"I'm not leaving," I whispered. "Even if you don't wake today. Even if you don't wake tomorrow."
Another breath—ragged, shallow, uneven.
Not like the still, artificial rhythm of soone sedated.
This was voluntary.
His chest moved again. A muscle in his jaw flexed. His lips parted like they wanted to form a word but couldn't.
I stayed still, letting him find the pace.
Letting him return the only way he knew how—one battered inch at a ti.
The next breath he drew was deeper.
Unsteady. But real.
And then—faintly, barely—his fingers brushed mine.
Not a grasp. Not a clutch.
A graze. Like he was reminding he was still tethered. Still trying.
My heart squeezed so tightly I could hardly breathe.
I drew back just enough to see him. His brows were faintly drawn, like so dim echo of pain or confusion lingered just beneath the surface. His lips parted again—and this ti, a low rasp escaped. Not a word. Not yet. But sound.
Lucinda made a sharp sound behind . Kael moved. Montegue stepped forward.
But I lifted a hand.
"Don't," I said, not looking at them. "Give him this."
Give us this.
I placed both hands on either side of his face, gentle but firm, guiding him back to .
"You're safe," I said, the words shaky but certain. "You're not alone. Not anymore."
His lashes lifted a fraction.
A sliver of storm-gray t mine.
Not fully focused. Not fully present.
But Hades was looking at .
A sound cracked from Kael's throat. Montegue whispered sothing I couldn't hear. Lucinda made a choked sob I didn't expect—but I didn't turn.
I couldn't.
His lips moved. I leaned in, desperate to catch even the ghost of a word.
"...Eve…"
A whisper. Broken. Like wind through shattered glass.
Tears fell down my face, soft and unchecked.
"I'm here," I whispered. "I'm here, Hades."
And for the first ti in what felt like forever—
He blinked.
Slow. Blurred.
But his gaze found mine again.
No fury. No Flux. No throne. No war.
Just him.
Just .
A beat later, his fingers curled more surely around mine.
And this ti—
He didn't let go.
A sharp sound broke through the silence.
Small. Fragile.
But not aningless.
"Daddy?"
The voice was high-pitched. Trembling. Filled with too many emotions for such a tiny word.
I turned.
Elliot had wriggled out of Lucinda's arms—his cheeks wet, his small hands clenched into fists at his sides.
"Daddy," he said again, louder now. The word cracked in the middle like it cost him everything.
My breath caught in my throat.
Hades blinked—slow, sluggish, stunned.
But that one word changed everything.
Elliot's feet hit the floor in rapid, uncertain steps, and before any of us could react, he ran forward, pushing between and the chair.
"Daddy!" he cried again—this ti not broken, but whole. Like it had finally burst from a dam long held back. His little hands reached for Hades' chest, for his arm, for anything.
And then—he turned to .
"Mummy," he sobbed, eyes wide and red-rimd.
I forgot how to breathe.
No one spoke.
But Elliot didn't stop.
He crawled up onto the bed in a flurry of limbs and sniffling breath, wedging himself between Hades and like his little body could anchor us both.
Hades let out a sound—not a word. Not a breath. A sound. Guttural and raw. A sob dressed in gravel and stunned silence.
"Ellie," I choked, my arms already around him.
But Elliot wasn't clinging.
He was holding.
Like he was the one who needed to keep us from breaking.
"Mummy… Daddy…" he said again, quieter now. Like if he stopped saying it, he'd lose it all.
I looked down at him, cupping his face, trembling.
"You spoke," I whispered, tears spilling freely. "Baby… you spoke."
Elliot nodded, burying his face in Hades' chest.
And then—
Hades' hand lifted.
Barely.
Just enough to rest over Elliot's back.
And I swear—I saw sothing shatter in his eyes. Sothing too big to na.
But there it was.
Real.
Present.
Elliot's voice had pulled him the last mile back.
We had him.
We had each other.
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