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Chapter 249: Discussions happen, next ti we won’t freeze everything up.

The words collided in the air with an unexpected synchronicity, as if, despite everything, there still existed between them a kind of connection that didn’t depend on agreent, logic, or control—sothing that simply happened, piercing the silence, piercing the pride, even piercing the distance Elizabeth had imposed between them. For a brief instant, neither of them moved, as if ti itself had hesitated along with them, suspending that mont in space before allowing any reaction to arise.

Damon turned his face first, his eyes eting hers with a slight, almost imperceptible surprise, and there was sothing more there, sothing softer than anything he had shown since the previous night, as if that coincidence had broken a part of the rigidity he had been maintaining ever since. The corner of his lips curved into a small, discreet, but genuine smile—sothing rare, sothing that carried neither irony nor defensiveness.

Ester blinked once, as if trying to reorganize her thoughts, and for a very brief second, sothing resembling a smile threatened to appear, but didn’t fully materialize. Still, her expression lost so of the tension, so of the hardness she had maintained like armor since everything had spiraled out of control.

"That was... strange," she murmured, looking away first, as if staring at him for too long was still too dangerous, as if there were things there she didn’t want him to see so easily.

"It was too synchronized to be a coincidence," Damon replied, his voice low, carrying a lightness that hadn’t been present before, as if, for the first ti since the fight, he wasn’t just trying to maintain control, but actually breathing a little easier.

The silence returned, but this ti it wasn’t as heavy. It still existed, still carrying everything that hadn’t been said, everything that still needed to be understood, but it no longer felt overwhelming. It was a silence that allowed space, that didn’t demand imdiate answers, that didn’t pressure.

Ester took a deep breath, slowly running her hand along her arm, as if trying to dispel a chill that didn’t exactly co from the night, but from within, from a place that was still unstable, still trying to reorganize itself after what had happened. She kept her gaze fixed ahead, but her voice was lower when she spoke again, less defensive, less rigid.

"I don’t know how to fix this," she admitted, and there was sothing vulnerable there, sothing she didn’t usually show, sothing she probably hated admitting aloud.

Damon didn’t answer imdiately. He also looked ahead, at the moonlit garden, as if he needed a mont to absorb those words, to decide how to respond without spoiling the fragile balance that had ford between them.

"I don’t think it can be fixed quickly," he said after a few seconds, calmly, without haste, "maybe not even completely."

Ester frowned slightly, her gaze still distant, as if that answer wasn’t exactly what she expected, or perhaps it was exactly what she feared.

"That doesn’t help much," she retorted, but without the previous sharpness, more tired than irritated.

Damon exhaled lightly through his nose, tilting his head back slightly, his eyes closing for a brief mont before opening again.

"I know," he admitted, without trying to justify himself, "but it’s the truth."

She fell silent again, her fingers tracing a distracted movent on the glass beneath her, as if trying to organize sothing internally, as if searching for a way to deal with it that didn’t involve simply ignoring it or exploding.

"I was scared," she said suddenly, and this ti her voice ca out even lower, almost as if it were sothing that shouldn’t have been said, sothing that slipped out before she could stop it.

Damon turned to her imdiately, his expression changing, the lightness fading, replaced by a more serious, more focused attention.

"From ?" he asked, without judgnt, just trying to understand.

Ester hesitated for a mont, long enough for the answer to be clear even before it was spoken.

"From myself," she corrected, and this ti her eyes closed for a longer mont, as if facing this was more difficult than anything else she had faced until then. "I couldn’t stop."

The words hung between them, carrying a weight that didn’t need reinforcing.

Damon looked away for a second, as if it had affected sothing within him too, sothing he recognized more than he would like.

"I’m not exactly a good example of self-control either," he said after a while, his voice lower, more restrained, and there was an honesty there that wasn’t comfortable, but it was necessary.

Ester let out a small breath, sothing close to a humorless laugh, shaking her head slightly.

"I already noticed that," she replied, but there was a slight hint of provocation there, almost imperceptible, as if a part of her was trying to return to normal, even if only a little.

Damon let out a small, sideways smile.

"Yeah, not my best trait."

Silence returned once more, but now there was sothing different about it, sothing closer to a pause than a barrier.

Ester opened her eyes again and, this ti, turned her face completely towards him, observing him more attentively, as if she were seeing sothing she hadn’t allowed herself to see before, as if she were trying to understand not only what he was saying, but what he wasn’t saying as well.

"You stayed there," she said, and it wasn’t exactly a question.

Damon held her gaze for a few seconds before answering.

"I did."

She frowned slightly.

"Even when I was trying to kill you."

He nodded, once.

"Even then."

Esther looked away quickly, as if that were harder to hear than any accusation.

"You’re an idiot," she murmured, but her voice faltered slightly at the end, betraying sothing that wasn’t exactly irritation.

Damon let out a small, low laugh, not offended.

"I’ve heard that before."

She remained silent for a few seconds, her fingers pressing lightly against the glass again, but this ti it wasn’t tension, it was sothing else, sothing more confusing, harder to na.

"You should have left," she said, still looking ahead, "it would have been easier."

Damon turned his body slightly toward her, not intruding, but positioning himself more present.

"For whom?" he asked calmly.

Ester didn’t answer imdiately.

Because she knew the answer.

And perhaps that was exactly why she didn’t want to say it aloud.

The wind passed again, colder now, lifting a few strands of hair that fell across her face, and for a mont, she didn’t move to brush them away, as if trapped in sothing she couldn’t quite organize.

Damon observed that small detail for a second, hesitated, and then, carefully, slowly raised his hand, as if giving her ti to pull back, to stop it, if she wanted.

But she didn’t move.

His fingers lightly touched the strands of hair, brushing them away from her face with a simple, almost insignificant gesture, but one that carried a delicacy that didn’t match anything that had happened between them until then.

Ester held her breath for a mont.

Not because the touch was strong.

But precisely because it wasn’t.

She opened her eyes slowly, her gaze eting his at a much closer distance than before, and for a second, everything seed to stop again, as if that small gesture had broken sothing invisible, sothing that maintained a safe distance between them.

"Elizabeth will kill us if she sees this," she murmured, but didn’t move away.

Damon tilted his head slightly, a faint trace of amusent appearing in his expression.

"She already wants to do it anyway," he replied, in a low tone.

Ester let out a small breath of air, almost a laugh, and for the first ti since he had arrived there, the sound was truly soft.

The soft sound that escaped Ester didn’t dissipate imdiately, remaining between them like sothing too delicate to be ignored, sothing small, but which seed to open a space amidst everything that was still broken. For a mont, she didn’t look away, didn’t back down, didn’t raise any barrier, as if she too were tired of maintaining that distance which, although necessary, was beginning to beco unbearable.

Damon perceived this.

Not as a clear sign.

Not as an invitation.

But as an absence of resistance.

And, at that mont, that was already too much.

He hesitated.

For a whole second.

Perhaps longer.

Because he knew that this was exactly the kind of decision that could worsen everything, that could undo the little balance they had managed to rebuild with effort. He knew that Elizabeth had made it clear, without ambiguity, that they needed distance, ti, space so as not to repeat the mistake.

But he also knew—

That there were things that couldn’t be resolved simply with distance.

Esther didn’t move away when he moved.

The gesture was slow.

Careful.

As if he were still giving her the chance to interrupt, to say no, to push him away.

But she did none of that.

She just stood there.

Her gaze locked on his.

Her breathing slightly uneven.

Her fingers still resting on the cold glass.

And then, without haste, without force, Damon brought his hand to her face, touching lightly, almost as if testing if she was still real there, in that mont, after everything that had happened.

Esther closed her eyes.

Not as a refusal.

But as a silent acceptance.

And that was enough.

He gently pulled her to him.

The kiss wasn’t rough.

It wasn’t as intense as it might have been at another ti.

It didn’t carry the urgency of the battle, nor the anger that had exploded between them hours before.

It was different.

Slower.

More restrained.

But still—

Full.

Full of everything they hadn’t said.

Of everything they had avoided.

Of everything they still didn’t know how to deal with.

Esther responded.

Without hesitation.

Without resistance.

Her fingers closed lightly on his clothes, as if she needed a point of support, sothing to keep her there, in that mont, without losing herself in what it ant.

The world around them seed to recede.

The garden.

The mansion.

The destruction.

Everything beca distant.

For a few seconds, there was only that.

The closeness.

The warmth.

The silent confirmation that, despite everything, they were still there.

When the kiss ended, it wasn’t abrupt.

It was gradual.

As if they both knew that breaking it all at once would make everything more difficult.

Damon kept his forehead pressed against hers for a mont, his breath still close, his eyes closed for a second before opening them again.

"Sorry," he murmured, his voice low, without any trace of playfulness this ti, just honest.

Ester took a little longer to respond.

Her eyes still closed.

As if she were absorbing not only the word, but everything that ca with it.

" too," she said, even lower, almost a whisper.

Silence returned.

But not heavy.

Not uncomfortable.

Just... present.

Damon let out a small breath, pulling back just enough to look at her again without completely losing the closeness.

"Fights happen," he said, in a light but not carefree tone, as if trying to find a way to say it without diminishing what had happened. "I think... it’s kind of inevitable."

Ester opened her eyes slowly, observing him intently, as if trying to understand where he was going with this.

"You call that a fight?" she asked, raising an eyebrow slightly, a hint of disbelief there, but also sothing lighter, almost provocative.

Damon let out a small breath, almost a laugh.

"Okay, maybe it was a... slightly exaggerated version."

She made a small sound through her nose, shaking her head slightly.

"A little?"

"Yeah," he corrected, raising one hand in surrender. "Very exaggerated."

Ester looked away for a second, but there was a trace of a smile there, discreet, almost hidden.

"You almost died," she said, but not as an accusation, more as an observation still difficult to ignore.

Damon shrugged slightly.

"You too."

Her gaze returned to him imdiately.

"It’s not the sa thing."

He held her gaze for a few seconds before answering, more serious now.

"Yes, it is."

The silence that followed wasn’t uncomfortable.

But it was heavy.

Because they both knew.

They knew exactly how close this had co to crossing an irreversible line.

Damon looked away for a mont, running a hand through his hair, as if organizing his thoughts before continuing.

"We need to control ourselves," he said afterward, his voice firr now, less soft. "Really."

Ester didn’t answer imdiately.

But she didn’t disagree.

Which, in itself, was already an answer.

"Because if this happens again..." he continued, looking around for a brief mont, as if the destroyed mansion itself were living proof of what he wanted to say.

"There won’t be anything left," he concluded, more quietly.

Ester followed his gaze.

The garden was intact.

But they both knew—

That it had been luck.

"You froze half the place," he added, turning his gaze to her, now with a slight hint of irony.

Ester narrowed her eyes slightly.

"You blew up the rest."

"I never said it was all your fault."

She crossed her arms, but without moving away.

"You started it."

Damon raised an eyebrow.

"You lost control."

"You provoked it."

"You responded."

"You insisted."

"You continued."

They stared at each other for a second.

Two.

And then—

Ester let out a small laugh.

Low.

Tired.

But real.

Damon followed, a slight smile returning, as if that exchange, however absurd, was the closest thing to normalcy they had at that mont.

"See?" he said, with a slight hand gesture. "This is a normal fight."

Ester shook her head, still with a hint of laughter.

"If this is normal for you, we have a problem."

"I never said it was a small problem."

Silence returned once more, but this ti there was no tension in it.

Just a shared space.

Lighter.

More breathable.

Damon looked at her for another mont, his expression softening again.

"Next ti..." he began, hesitating briefly, as if choosing his words more carefully, "we’ll try not to destroy the whole house."

Ester let out a small sigh, looking ahead again.

"Next ti, we’ll stop before that."

He nodded.

"Before that."

A pause.

And then, almost like a thought that escaped unfiltered, she murmured:

"Or before I try to kill you."

Damon tilted his head slightly, watching her.

"That would be a good start."

She didn’t answer.

But she didn’t disagree.

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