REON
I lowered myself into the vinyl chair next to him, the plastic groaning under my weight. I let out a long, exasperated sigh that ca from the very bottom of my lungs. It was the only sound I could manage.
Denki’s head turned slowly. He looked at , his eyes red-rimd and empty. There was no fight left in him. No clever smirk, no guarded calculation. Just a hollowed-out shell of the man I’d once called my brother.
My mind was a blank, roaring static. How the fuck do I start this? ’Hey, rember that ti you spent a decade lying to my face and then tried to help ruin ? Good tis, let’s catch up.’ There were no words for this. No script. We were in uncharted, deeply fucked-up territory.
From beside , Denki let out a sigh of his own, a mirror of my exhaustion. It broke the silence, but not the tension.
"How are you holding up?" I finally asked. The words felt stupid and inadequate, but they were all I had. A generic question for a situation that was anything but.
Denki gave a slow, weary nod, his gaze drifting back to the far wall. "I’m... fine. Still in shock, I think. But... fine."
I nodded back. Fine. What a useless word.
The silence descended again, thicker and more awkward than before. It was a physical weight, pressing down on both of us. I could feel the ghost of every shared drink, every late-night strategy session, every mont of trust that now felt like a deliberate, cruel joke.
It was Denki who broke it again, his voice quiet. "I’m also struggling too," he said, as if he could hear the frantic, silent screaming in my head. "I don’t really know what to say to you. You know... after everything."
Of course he knows I’m struggling. He knows better than almost anyone. Or he did. That was the whole problem. I gave a single, sharp nod. "You did so fucked up shit, Denki."
"I know," he said, the words imdiate and devoid of any defense. He let out a bitter, huffing sound that was almost a laugh. "And I know a half-hearted apology wouldn’t cut it. It wouldn’t even brush the surface."
"You’re right," I said, my voice flat. "It wouldn’t." A part of , the part that was still so fucking angry, was glad he knew that. Glad he wasn’t trying to cheapen it with easy words. "At least you know you fucked up."
"Big ti," he whispered, the words full of a profound and weary self-loathing. He stayed quiet for another long mont, gathering himself. Then, he turned his head and looked directly in the eyes. "For what it’s worth... and I know it might not be worth much... I really am sorry."
He didn’t look away. He held my gaze, and in his eyes, I didn’t see the traitor or the spy. I saw the boy I’d pulled out of a fight in a back alley in Roppongi. I saw the exhaustion, the regret, and the genuine, shattered remorse.
I sighed again, the fight draining out of all at once. How was I supposed to stay mad at a ghost? How was I supposed to cling to my rage when the man in front of was already so thoroughly destroyed? The anger was still there, a cold, hard stone in my gut, but it was suddenly too heavy to carry. The well was just... dry.
The silence was starting to feel heavy, like a wet blanket. All this regret and sadness was just... depressing. We could sit here all night staring at the walls and it wouldn’t change a damn thing. I needed to shift the mood. We needed sothing, anything, else to talk about.
"I saw Soma recently," I said, the na cutting through the thick air.
Denki’s head turned, a flicker of genuine curiosity in his tired eyes. "You went to Japan?"
"I did," I confird, leaning back in the uncomfortable chair. "And the bastard is now a full-ti Yakuza and CEO. No more pretending. The man runs a tech empire from a boardroom and a criminal one from a back room. It’s... disturbingly efficient."
A snort, then a real, if weak, chuckle escaped Denki. "No shit."
I felt my own lips twitch into a smirk. "No shit."
And just like that, for a single, fleeting second, it was like old tis. Talking about Soma’s insane life choices. A shared piece of our history that wasn’t tainted by betrayal. It was a tiny crack of light in a very dark room.
Seeing that opening, I went for it. I turned in my seat and offered him my hand. Just a simple handshake. It felt stupid and monuntal at the sa ti.
Denki stared at my outstretched hand like it was a snake. He hesitated, his eyes wide with a mixture of hope and disbelief. I could see the war in his head—did he deserve it? Was it a trick?
I rolled my eyes, the familiar gesture feeling strangely comforting. "Anything before I’m old and grey," I drawled, the sarcasm a familiar shield for both of us.
That did it. He let out a shaky breath, almost a laugh, and then he reached out. His hand was cold, but his grip was firm. We shook. It wasn’t the enthusiastic clasp of brothers, but it was solid. Real. An acknowledgnt.
"We’re cool," I said, my voice low. It wasn’t forgiveness. That would take ti, if it ever ca. But it was a ceasefire. A line drawn in the sand. The war between us was over.
"Thank you," Denki whispered, the words thick with emotion. He looked down at our hands, then let go, as if he’d held on too long.
I stood up, the chair squeaking in protest. My eyes scanned the room, instantly finding my true north. Paige. She was standing across the waiting room, watching us. And she was smiling. A small, soft, knowing smile that lit up her whole face. Of course she was. This was probably her master plan all along.
I rolled my eyes again, this ti for her benefit, but I couldn’t stop the fond smirk that tugged at my lips. As I walked past Denki, I gave him a single, firm pat on the back. It wasn’t a hug. It wasn’t a slap on the shoulder. It was just a pat. A simple, wordless gesture that said more than any more apologies ever could.
Then I walked away from the wreckage of my past and straight toward my future, who was still smiling at like she’d just won the whole damn world. And in a way, she had.
I crossed the waiting room, the sterile white lights feeling a little less harsh than before. Paige was leaning against the wall, her arms crossed. And she was smirking.
That little, knowing, utterly infuriating smirk that always made want to kiss her and strangle her at the sa ti.
"Look at you," she purred as I reached her. "Handing out salvation like ’God Almighty.’ I’m impressed."
I stopped in front of her, sliding my hands into my pockets. A slow, sarcastic smile spread across my own face. It felt good. Normal. "Well, you saved two today," I fired back, my tone dry. "So what does that make you? The Patron Saint of Lost Causes and Broken Families?"
She just gave a casual, unbothered shrug, but her eyes were shining. She was happy. Truly, deeply happy with how this had all turned out. And seeing that, feeling the weight of her relief, made every uncomfortable second in that chair worth it.
"I’m done here," I announced, my gaze sweeping over the bleak waiting area. "I’m done with the hospital, the antiseptic sll, the vinyl chairs... all of it. My quota for family drama is filled for the next decade."
"Then let’s go ho," she said softly, pushing off the wall. "But we should say goodbye."
I nodded. One last formality. We walked over to where Barbara was still sitting, looking a little less lost than before, but still fragile. Paige leaned down and gave her a quick, sowhat stiff hug. "Goodbye, Mother."
Barbara’s eyes were damp as she looked at over Paige’s shoulder. "I know it’s not necessarily my place to say," she began, her voice hesitant. "But... you should take good care of her."
My gaze didn’t waver. I looked her right in the eye, my voice flat and absolute. "I always do."
It wasn’t a promise. It was a fact. As simple and unchangeable as the sun rising. She seed to understand that, giving a slow, accepting nod.
We then turned to Denki, who had stood up, looking uncertain. Paige offered him a small smile. "Goodbye, Denki."
I gave him a single, curt nod. "We’ll see you later," I said. It was a statent that held a world of new aning. It wasn’t a threat. It wasn’t a promise of friendship. It was just... a fact. Our paths would cross again. And next ti, maybe it wouldn’t be in a room that slled of despair.
With that, I placed my hand on the small of Paige’s back, a familiar and possessive gesture, and guided her toward the elevator. The doors slid open, and we stepped inside, leaving the quiet tragedy of the Ristone family behind us.
As the doors closed, sealing us in our own private world, I finally felt the last of the tension leave my shoulders. The air didn’t sll like antiseptic anymore. It slled like her. Like us. Like ho. I looked down at her, at the woman who had dragged through hell and back and sohow made a better man for it.
"Let’s go ho, Black Cat," I murmured, pulling her close. "We have an heir to think about."
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