Chapter 1303: Reaching The Heart (Part Two)
Gently, Milo pressed his forehead against Ollie’s, his clawed hands cradling the young witch’s face as he poured his heart out in hopes of reaching the man who had beco so much more than just a friend to him.
"You saved my family," Milo whispered. "You saved my mother when everyone else had given up on the carvings in our village as lost. You dug through the ashes and the embers to bring back the missing pieces of her heart."
"You gave us a ho when we had nothing," he continued. "You beca my brother when I needed one most. So please, Ollie. Please don’t leave . Don’t leave us. We still need you. I still need you."
The carving pulsed with emotion in Ollie’s hands, hope and pride and worry and fear and determination all swirling together, all speaking of how much Milo cared, how much Milo valued him, how much it would hurt to lose him.
And slowly, gradually, like dawn breaking after the longest night, the darkness began to recede from Ollie’s eyes.
It didn’t happen all at once. The shadows clung stubbornly, reluctant to release their hold on soone who had co so close to crossing the threshold. But the emotions in the carving pushed back against them, warm and alive and insistent, reminding Ollie that he was loved, that he was needed, that he was wanted.
The void offered peace, yes. But the carving offered sothing more. It offered connection, belonging, and purpose. It offered the knowledge that there were people in the world who would grieve if he was gone, who would be diminished by his absence.
It offered proof that he mattered. To Milo. To Ashlynn. To countless others who, in the grip of the void’s darkness, he hadn’t thought would miss him when he was gone.
Ollie’s fingers tightened around the carving, and he took a deeper breath. Not the shallow, rattling gasps of before, but a slow, steady breath that carried the warmth of the fire into his chest and held it there for a mont before he allowed himself to exhale. His eyes blinked once, twice, and a third ti before the shadows began to thin, revealing glimpses of the pale irises beneath.
"Milo?" Ollie’s voice was confused, uncertain, like soone waking from a terrible dream. "What... what happened? Why are you crying?"
The shadows were still there, still visible at the edges of his gaze, but they were receding now, retreating back toward whatever dark place they had co from. Ollie’s eyes focused on Milo’s face, really seeing him for the first ti since being pulled from the water, and confusion gave way to concern.
"Why does everyone look so worried?" Ollie asked, his voice growing slightly stronger. His body felt weak, weaker than he’d ever felt before, and he was cold and wet beneath the cloak that soone had thrown over him, but that alone couldn’t explain why everyone around him was looking at him with puffy eyes and tearful gazes. "Did sothing go wrong? Is Lady Cerys...?"
He tried to sit up, to look across the fire where Lady Cerys lay wrapped in cloaks, but Milo’s arms tightened around him, holding him in place, and Ollie was far too weak to resist him.
"Don’t," Milo said, his voice thick with tears. "Don’t try to move. Don’t try to do anything. Just... just stay here. Stay with . Please."
Ollie’s brow furrowed in confusion, and his free hand ca up to touch Milo’s face, his fingers brushing against the wet fur and the tears that wouldn’t stop falling.
"Milo, what’s wrong?" Ollie asked as he fought to keep his teeth from chattering in the cold. "Please, tell , if sothing happened to Lady Cerys, I have to..."
"You almost died," Milo interrupted, his voice cracking on the words. "You almost let go, Ollie. You were staring into the void, and you were going to..." he started to say, only for a lump to form in his throat that stopped him from repeating the word ’die.’
"You were going to leave us," Milo said instead, gazing directly into Ollie’s pale eyes to see if he understood. "We were, we were all about to lose you."
Understanding dawned slowly in Ollie’s clearing eyes. He looked down at the carving in his hand, at the rough wooden knight that Milo had pressed into his palm, and sothing in his expression shifted. The confusion gave way to recognition, and then to sothing that might have been sha or regret or grief.
"I’m sorry," Ollie whispered as the mory of that terrible emptiness ca back to him, and he realized how close he’d been to succumbing to the sweet, siren call of the void. "Milo, I’m so sorry. I didn’t... I wasn’t thinking clearly. Everything just felt so heavy, and I was so tired, and..."
He couldn’t finish the sentence. His voice broke, and suddenly he was crying too, tears streaming down his pale cheeks as the weight of what he had almost done crashed down on him.
"I’m sorry," he said again, clutching the carving to his chest with one hand while the other one wrapped tightly around Milo’s body. "I’m so sorry."
Milo pulled him close, holding him as tightly as he dared without hurting him, and felt Ollie’s whole body shake with exhausted sobs. Around them, the others maintained a respectful distance.
"Don’t ever do that to
again," Milo said fiercely into Ollie’s ear. "Don’t ever frighten
like that again. Do you understand? You don’t get to decide that you’re done, that your duty is finished, that you can just slip away. Not without talking to
first. Not without giving
a chance to fight for you."
"I won’t," Ollie promised, his voice muffled against Milo’s shoulder. "I won’t. I promise. I’m sorry. I’m so sorry."
They stayed like that for a long ti, two brothers holding onto each other while the fire crackled nearby and the dead forest stood silent witness to the price of miracles. And gradually, as the warmth of the flas and the warmth of his brother’s embrace seeped into his bones, the last of the shadows faded from Ollie’s eyes, leaving behind only exhaustion and lingering tears.
He was alive. He was here. He was staying.
And that, Milo thought as he held his brother close, was all that mattered...
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