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Each word was a lance to her heart. She held him through the torrent, rocking them gently there on the cold ground, her tears mingling with his. “You listen to ,” she said, her voice gaining strength, becoming a vow etched in stone. “We will save Aki. I promise you that. You are not weak. You are the strongest person I know. You have survived a lifeti of hell and you are still here, still fighting, still loving. That is not weakness. That is a strength nobody can ever comprehend. And you are not alone. You have . You have Nyxara. You have Kuro, who needs you more than he’d ever admit. You have all of us. This weight is not yours to carry alone. Let help you. Please, let help you.”

The world shrank to the cold stone beneath them and the warmth between them. For hours, there was only the sound of their breathing, slowly syncing, and the fading echo of Shiro’s anguish in the plaza’s dense air. His tears had slowed to a stop, leaving his face feeling raw and tight, his eyes swollen. He kept his face buried in the wool of Statera’s tunic, embarrassed by the storm that had just passed through him, yet unable to pull away from the safety he found there.

Statera’s hand continued its gentle, rhythmic motion on his back. “I’ll tell you a story about sothing similar. When I was a girl,” she began, her voice a soft, low murmur that vibrated comfortingly through her chest and into his ear, “younger than you are now, I tried to carry a water jar that was far too heavy for . I was determined to prove to my mother I was strong, that I could handle the chores of an adult. I made it halfway across the courtyard before my arms gave out. The jar shattered. Water and pottery everywhere. I was devastated. I thought I’d failed.”

Shiro was quiet, listening. The story was a lifeline thrown to him, pulling him out of the depths of his own misery.

“My mother didn’t scold ,” Statera continued. “She knelt in the puddle with , her fine robes getting soaked, and she helped pick up the pieces. And she told sothing I have never forgotten. She said, ‘Statera, my love, true strength is not asured by the weight you can carry on your own. It is asured by the wisdom to know when a burden is ant for two shoulders, and the courage to ask for the second pair.’” She paused, letting the words settle. “I have spent a lifeti, especially after we lost your mother, forgetting that lesson. I built walls. I carried everything myself. I thought it was my duty, my atonent. And it nearly broke . I will not let that happen to you.”

Shiro finally lifted his head, his amber eyes glassy but clear. “It’s not the sa,” he whispered, his voice hoarse. “Your jar held water. My burden is… it’s Aki. It’s the fear that I’ll fail her. It’s the mory of my mother burning. It’s… it’s poison. I can’t ask soone else to help carry poison. It’s not fair.”

“Oh, my little rain baby.” Statera said, her own eyes welling up again. “Don’t you see? That’s exactly what family is for. We dilute the poison for each other. We share the load until the weight of it becos bearable. Until the mory isn’t a knife in your heart, but a scar that reminds you that you survived. You do not have to drink that poison alone. Let taste it with you. Let help you bear it.”

He looked at her, truly looked at her, seeing the unwavering certainty in her gaze. The words he wanted to say lodged in his throat. The word Mother felt too big, too sacred, too fraught with the ghost of the mother he’d lost. He opened his mouth, closed it, and looked down at his hands. “I… I want to…” he stamred, his cheeks flushing. “What I called you… I didn’t an to…”

A soft, understanding smile touched Statera’s lips. She cupped his cheek, her thumb gently stroking the skin where she’d struck him. “I know exactly what you ant,” she said softly. “And you can call that, if you want to. You can call ‘Aunt.’ You can call ‘Statera.’ You can call ‘the stubborn woman who slapped you.’” Her smile widened a fraction. “But I know what was in your heart when you said it. And there is no greater honour in this world than to be that for you. I will be your mother in every way that matters, if you will have .”

The offer, so freely and lovingly given, undid him all over again. A fresh wave of tears broke free, but they were of a different kind of pain, a sweet, healing ache. He nuzzled into her robes more, unable to speak.

“But,” she added, her tone shifting to sothing lighter, teasing, “it does co with conditions.”

He looked up, confused. “Conditions?”

“Yes. For instance,” she said, her eyes sparkling with mischief despite the lingering tears, “it gives the right to bestow upon you terribly embarrassing baby nicknas. And I’m afraid one has already co to .” She leaned closer, her voice a playful whisper. “My little rain baby.”

Shiro’s blush returned in full force, spreading from his cheeks to his neck. “You can’t call that!” he protested, his voice a mix of horror and amusent.

“Why not? It’s perfect. It suits you. You’ve have such… prolific tears. Like an infant. My little rain cloud.” She was fully smiling now, the expression transforming her face, making her look years younger.

“You cannot tell anyone,” he pleaded, a genuine note of panic in his voice. “Especially not Kuro. ESPECIALLY Kuro. He would never let hear the end of it. He’d tell the entire resistance. I’d never live it down.”

Statera’s smile turned into a full-fledged, mischievous grin. “Oh, I don’t know… I think it’s only fair. You were quite rciless with Kuro and his new title. The ‘Baby Black Prince’ deserves to know he’s not the only one with a… diminutive moniker.”

Shiro’s eyes went wide. “You wouldn’t.”

This content has been misappropriated from ; report any instances of this story if found elsewhere.

“I would,” she sang softly. “In fact, I think it would be a wonderful way to start the morning. Gather everyone around and say, ‘Good morning, Baby Black Prince. Good morning, my little Rain Baby.’ See? It has a nice ring to it.”

He stared at her, utterly horrified, but he could see the laughter in her eyes. She was teasing him. The world, which had felt like it was ending minutes ago, had righted itself on a new, terrifying, and wonderful axis. He was being teased by his… mother.

“You’re cruel,” he muttered, but he was fighting a smile of his own.

“I’m nurturing,” she corrected him primly. “I’m building character. And familial bonds.” She gently patted his knee.

“You’re cruel,” he muttered, but he was fighting a smile of his own.

“I’m now a mother,” she corrected, her voice dripping with sweet, rciless authority. “It’s my sacred right to embarrass my child. It’s in the job description, right after ‘unconditional love’ and before ‘knows how to remove any stain.’ Now, let’s get you inside before you catch a chill. All that dampness from your… well, from you… can’t be good for you.”

Shiro’s flush returned with a vengeance. “The dampness from the mist, you an!”

“Oh, was the mist also what made those little sniffly sounds?” she asked, reaching out to pinch his cheek, a gesture so patronizing and childish he nearly combusted on the spot. “And what made you pout so adorably? Was that the mist, too, my little rain baby? Does the mist need a nap?”

“I am going to dissolve into this rock and beco one with the plaza,” he groaned, trying to swat her hand away, but she was already ruffling his hair into an even more disastrous state.

“None of that,” she chided, her tone that of a nanny addressing a toddler. “We don’t beco one with the nightmare plaza, no matter how tempting. We go inside, and we get so proper rest. And if you’re very good, I might even tell you a bedti story. I know a wonderful one about a very brave, very soggy little boy.”

“I will run,” he threatened, with zero conviction. “I will join Lucifera and beco a shadow. You’ll never tease again.”

“And leave your poor, worried mother all alone? After I’ve just found you?” She clutched her chest in mock devastation. “You wouldn’t be so heartless. Besides, you’d miss my cuddles and soon my cooking, I’ll have to make you sothing warm and mushy to build your strength. Sothing easy for my little baby to eat. Do you need to check if you need a fresh nappy, too, while I’m at it?”

The sound he made was a strangled sob of utter defeat. “You’re… you’re the worst.”

“I’m the best,” she chirped, holding him tighter. “And you’re stuck with froever. Now, co along, rain baby. One foot in front of the other. Watch your step, we wouldn’t want you to trip and start another waterworks display as my back is screaming after your last tumble.”

The ntion of her pain wiped the smile from his face. “Your back! I’m so sorry, I…”

“Hush,” she interrupted. “It was worth it. Now, co on.” She began to slowly, carefully, get to her feet, extending a hand to help him up. Once they were both standing, she didn’t let go of his hand. She looked at him, her expression softening back into that deep, serious love.

“No more,” she said, her voice firm but infinitely gentle, her thumb stroking the back of his hand.

“No more what”

“No more wandering off alone into the dark. You’re not carrying this by yourself. From now on, you’re sleeping with .”

Shiro’s face, which had been relaxing, flushed with a fresh wave of embarrassnt. He was a young man, a resistance fighter. “Aunty… I’m… I’m old enough to sleep on my own,” he muttered, unable to et her gaze, the ‘Mother’ still too imnse, too new to repeat in the cool light of dawn.

Statera’s expression was a masterpiece of maternal patience mixed with unshakable resolve. “From what I just witnessed, the nightmare, the solitary weeping, the spectacular fall, and the subsequent bestowal of a truly excellent nickna, you are about as capable of being alone right now as an infant, but you are my infant. And that is perfectly alright.” She squeezed his hand. “Don’t make repeat myself. Or would you prefer another demonstration of my… convincing thods?” She raised her eyebrows, a playful threat in her eyes.

The ghost of a real smile, watery and weak but genuine, finally touched his lips. He looked at their joined hands, then up at her face, seeing the love that had wielded that slap, the strength that had taken the fall for him, and the humour that was now pulling him back from the ledge. He hesitated for a mont, then sighed, a sound of pure, surrendered acceptance.

“Fine,” he mumbled. “But please don’t tell anyone about ‘rain baby’.”

Statera let out a rich, warm laugh that seed to push back the gloom of the plaza. “I wont make any promises, my little rain baby”

“Aunty… you’re being cruel,” Shiro whispered, his voice trembling with embarrassnt as he looked away. “I’m begging you, please don’t tell anyone about ‘rain baby.’”

Statera just smirked, her eyes dancing with mischief. “Oh, but it’s such a perfect na for you, my little rain baby,” she teased, leaning in closer. “And I’m not sure I can promise anything… after all, you were so adorable crying, it made my heart flutter.”

Shiro's face twisted in a mix of embarrassnt and frustration. "Aunty, please! It's bad enough you saw like that. Don't you dare tell anyone about my nickna!" he pleaded, his voice cracking with the weight of his desperation.

Statera's eyes sparkled with mischief as she leaned in closer. "Oh, but it's such a lovely nickna, little rain baby," she cooed, her voice dripping with mock sweetness. "Why would I keep sothing so precious to myself?"

Shiro's cheeks burned as he struggled to find words. "It's not lovely! It's humiliating! I sound like so sort of...of…" he stamred, unable to finish his sentence.

"And that's exactly why it suits you so well," Statera teased, her laughter soft but insistent. "Now, co along, my little rain baby. It's ti to put all this behind us and get so rest," she said, tugging gently on his hand as she stood, her tone finally softening but the nickna still firmly in place.

Hand in hand, they walked back into the fissure, where the others still slept, oblivious to the earthquake that had just occurred outside and the new, unbreakable alliance that had been forged in its aftermath. Statera settled onto her pallet and without a word, opened her arms. After a heartbeat’s hesitation, Shiro curled up beside her, turning onto his side and fitting himself against her, his head finding its place on her shoulder. Her arm ca around him, holding him securely, her hand resting on his back, a solid, steady weight.

As the true dawn finally began to paint the chamber with a pale, hopeful light, Statera whispered into his hair, “Rest now, my little rain baby. We’ll face whatever cos tomorrow. Together.”

The scene closed with the soft, synchronized rhythm of their breathing. The war was still coming. The Black Keep still lood. But for now, in the quiet aftermath of the storm, they were not a councillor and a soldier. They were not an aunt and a nephew. They were simply a mother and her son, bound by a love that had been tested in fire and found unbreakable, their strength forged in shared vulnerability and sealed with a teasing threat that promised a future of light, even in the darkest of tis.

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