Door to stop 19
Chapter 0019 Janet’s Point of View “Take care, sis,” Peter said, leaning across the car seat as I stepped out. My youngest brother’s smile was warm, his eyes crinkling at…
Chapter 0019 Janet’s Point of View “Take care, sis,” Peter said, leaning across the car seat as I stepped out. My youngest brother’s smile was warm, his eyes crinkling at…
Chapter 99 I shook my head, heart full. “Nah,” I murmured, watching our little prince disappear into the bustle of family and warmth and love. “Let them spoil him.” Levi There was something surreal about watching my parents fuss over a child again. Not in the way they did with us, strict but loving, loud but loyal. This was gentler, like they’d learned the value of slowing down. “Alright, hold it straight for me now,” Dad said, hammer in hand, a nameplate tucked under his arm. Elliot stood in front of the door of the room they had prepped. His door. His mouth slightly open as he traced the carved letters with his eyes. “Elliot’s Room.” He held the plate carefully, his small hands trembling just slightly as Dad gently helped him level it. “Right there?” Dad asked. Elliot nodded hard. “Yes, sir.” “None of that now. You can call me Pa. If you want.” Something flickered in Elliot’s expression. He nodded again. Slower this time. “Okay… Pa.” I could’ve sworn my father’s heart burst open right then. With a few solid taps of the hammer, the nameplate was in place. Elliot stepped back, hands behind his back like he didn’t quite know what to do with himself. Then Mum stepped forward. She was holding a gift box and knelt in front of Elliot and opened it. The moment I saw the ears, I choked. “No way,” I whispered to Xavier beside me. “Is that…?” he blinked. “It can’t be.” “Oh, it is.” Elliot’s eyes went wide. “A teddy bear?” Mum chuckled. “Not just any bear. This little troublemaker nearly tore my household apart.” “That’s Fergus,” I whispered, a grin breaking over my face. “We fought over that bear so much that Mum had to hide it. I thought it was lost forever,” “No, no,” Mum said with a secret smile. “I just needed him to survive your childhood. He’s been in my drawer for the last decade.” Elliot hugged it to his chest like it was sacred. “Thank you…Nanna” “You’re welcome, sweetheart,” She whispered, brushing his hair back. “He’s always been meant for someone special,”…
Chapter 0018 Janet’s Point of View Tracy drove fast as we left the hospital parking lot. Once we were on the main road, she glanced at me with worried eyes. …
Chapter 0017 Janet’s Point of View I stepped out of Tracy’s car, my heart beating fast in my chest. The tall building of Lakeview Private Hospital stood in front of…
Chapter 98 Xavier A སྔོན་ན་བང། འབར་མ་ “Do you yield?” Elliot shouted dramatically, stick raised high in his hand like it were a royal scepter. Levi was on his knees, laughing, covered in bits of leaf and burlap. “Fine! We yield. The mighty tree stump fortress is too strong!” Noah groaned, brushing off dirt from his shoulder. “It wasn’t the stump. It was the crystal booby traps.” “I told you he was sneaky,” Haiden added, panting beside him. “Never underestimate a kid with trauma and magic.” I laughed from where I sat on the ground, arms crossed, watching the scene with a pride I couldn’t quite name. “You should’ve seen yourselves,” Envy said as she entered the fort unscathed. “Four grown hellhounds brought to their knees by a seven–year–old and a pup. 35 Elliot turned toward me, eyes gleaming, and I couldn’t help the warmth that bloomed in my chest. “Did we win?” he asked. “You didn’t just win,” I said, hopping up and walking over. “You crushed us. That fort was genius. You and Macey made an unbeatable team.” He beamed, practically vibrating with joy. Macey squeezed his hand in celebration, and the two of them did a little jumping dance of triumph that made Levi snort. “Now,” Elliot said, clearing his throat and straightening like a miniature king, “as per our agreement…” My brothers and I groaned in unison. “I declare,” Elliot continued, “that I get all of your desserts. For a week.” “A week?” Noah whined. “You said it,” Haiden sighed, “I was hoping he’d forget,” Levi muttered, though his smirk betrayed him. Xavier raised a brow. “We did shake on it.” Elliot folded his arms with mock authority. “Swear it.” One by one, we knelt again, more dramatic than necessary, because gods, we were going to live to spoil this kid. “We swear,” we all said. Levi was the first to scoop him up after that, slinging Elliot onto his shoulders with a triumphant whoop. “You’ve bested us in battle, Prince of Hay Bales. Time to feast.” “I’ll bring Macey with us!” Noah said, ruffling her curls before lifting her onto his hip. “Let’s head back before Mum eats all the pies.” As they wandered off, laughter trailing behind them, I lingered with Elliot still perched high on Levi’s shoulders. From the corner of the courtyard, I spotted Tommy approaching, wiping his hands on a towel from helping with the food. The moment Elliot saw him, he asked, “Are you the Beta?”…
Chapter 0016 Rowan’s Point of View I stared at the papers on my desk, the words blurring together. Alex had sent these files about our business while I was away,…
Chapter 97 Noah Gods, he really was ours. I watched him from the tree line, arms crossed, pretending to be assessing fort integrity, but really, I was just trying not to let anyone see the stupid smile on my face. Elliot was crouched in the grass beside Macey, the two of them deep in a whisper–huddle like they were planning an international heist instead of building a fort. He pulled something from his pocket, the crystal, faintly glowing with his newly forming magic. I caught the shimmer of it even from here. This kid. We’d barely brought him through the portal and already he had half the pack rallying behind him and Macey swearing vengeance in his name. She used to cry when someone knocked over her fort. Now she was plotting full- scale retaliation. With him. Gods, I loved him already. I wasn’t even sure when it happened. Maybe it was the moment I saw him gripping Envy’s hand like she was the sun and the only anchor he had. Or when he looked at me like I mattered. Like we mattered. Like we were safe. That kind of look sticks. “He’s gonna wreck us,” Haiden muttered beside me, arms folded. “Look at that teamwork. They’ve got a battle plan. Schematics. Probably a war council.” “They’re building battlements out of actual enchanted vines,” Levi said in disbelief. “What even is that crystal he’s using?” Xavier just chuckled. “Envy’s raw magic. It’s got Macey taking notes. That’s terrifying.” “Honestly?” I said, watching Elliot as he smiled, really smiled, that full kind with crinkled eyes and a laugh that sounded like something blooming after winter. “I hope he wrecks us.” My brothers went quiet for a beat. I didn’t care. Let them see. Let them know. Because something inside me had already rearranged itself the moment Elliot took my hand back at the Veil and looked at me like I was more than just a warrior or a hellhound or a walking wall of loyalty. He looked at me like I was safe. Like I was home and gods help me, I wanted to be that for him. “He’s family now,” I said quietly. Xavier gave me a sideways glance. “Already making adoption papers?” “Damn right,” I said. Out in the field, Elliot and Macey began layering illusions over their walls. Not just shields, trickery. Portals that looped back to the entrance. Decoys. Sound–based traps, Was that a laughing fog cloud? “Oh gods,” Haiden whispered. “They’re evil geniuses.” “They’re us,” Levi said with a hint of pride and he was right. After absolutely decimating the other kids‘ forts, because tradition is tradition, we circled back as a unit, lining up in front of the final stronghold. Elliot and Macey stood atop it like tiny warlords, their hands clasped dramatically as they stared us down. “We won’t go down easy,” Elliot called. “Not without a tickle tax!” Macey added. I grinned. Gods, I was so proud of this little nightmare prince already. He didn’t just build a fort. He built a kingdom. Haiden This was supposed to be a game. A light–hearted, run–‘em–down, knock–over–some–pillows, let–the–kids–feel–cool–for–five–minutes kind of game. But no. We were under siege. By children….
chapter 0015 Janet’s Point of View Tracy’s question hit me hard. I froze for a second, not because I didn’t want to answer, but because I didn’t know where to…
Chapter 0014 Janet’s Point of View “What the hell are you doing here?” Claire’s voice came again, sharper this time, as she walked up close to I didn’t answer. I…
Chapter 96 “Okay,” I whispered to it, to myself. “I want a window. One that shows the stars. Real ones.” Light bloomed from the far wall. A large arched opening grew like roots curling outward, and through it I saw the night sky, my sky. Not the one above the battlefield or the broken veil. This one was deep, endless, peaceful. Galaxies spun in slow motion. Constellations I didn’t know the names of winked down like old friends. A moon hung low and gold, just close enough to touch if I really wanted to try. I gasped. It was perfect. “And books,” I said, barely above a whisper. D Shelves rose from the ground, twining upward like vines, filling with books that smelled like old paper and magic. Some were ancient, with gold- leaf pages and cracked leather spines. Others looked newer, with bright colors and titles that hinted at dragons, treasure maps, and impossible adventures. I stepped forward, running a hand across the nearest spine. My fingers trembled. I’d never owned a book before. “And… music.” A soft hum began to play, like the lullabies I imagined mothers might sing, if I’d ever had one. Gentle, magical. The kind that made your chest ache in a good way. “And a bed. A soft one.” The floor beside me shifted, rising like breath into a wide circular nest of pillows and plush blankets. It wasn’t sharp–edged or stiff; it looked like somewhere you could fall asleep and be safe. Truly safe. I stood in the center of it all, hands still clutching the crystal, heart pounding. Then I heard a voice behind me. “Elliot.” I turned. Envy stood at the doorway, silhouetted in the starlight. Her smile wasn’t pitying, it was proud. Warm. Real. “You did this,” she said softly. “You made this.” I nodded slowly. “It’s mine?” “All yours,” she whispered. I didn’t know how to respond. The words in my throat weren’t strong enough. So I just stepped forward and wrapped my arms around her waist, burying my face into her stomach. She froze, just for a moment, and then melted into the hug, pressing a hand to the back of my head. “You’re allowed to have soft things now, Elliot,” she whispered into my hair. “You’re allowed to dream.” I squeezed tighter, then looked up at her with a small smile. “I want to learn how to play,” I said. “I want to learn how to laugh.” Envy’s eyes shone like moonlight on water. “Then we’ll teach you.” “Are we ready to go to our other home?” Xavier asked behind her. The portal shimmered like a soap bubble caught in moonlight. I hesitated. Envy reached for my hand, no words, just a gentle squeeze, and I stepped through beside her. The moment we landed, I was swallowed by sound. Laughter. Barking. Cheering. Children’s shrieks of excitement. The sun here was warm and rich, the wind carried the smell of baking bread and fresh–cut grass, and everything buzzed with life. This… this was Red Moon. The moment the portal snapped closed behind us, a crowd surged forward. A tall woman with kind eyes and silver in her dark curls rushed to Envy, cupping her face. “You did it,” she whispered, voice thick with emotion. “My girl.”…