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Chapter 64 - Chapter 63The Things We Never Said

Isle POV

There was a strange peace over the house for the next few days.

Not happiness.

Not resolution.

Just peace.

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The kind that arrives after a storm when everyone is still checking the sky.

Waiting to see if the clouds are truly gone.

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Part of me should have enjoyed it.

Instead, it made me restless.

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Because for months I had been reacting.

Responding.

Surviving.

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Now there was space.

And I wasn't entirely sure what to do with it.

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I spent more time drawing.

More time reading.

More time walking through the garden without my phone.

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And every time I did, I discovered another small thing I had forgotten about myself.

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One afternoon I found an old playlist.

Songs I used to listen to years ago.

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The first track started playing.

And suddenly I was seventeen again.

Laughing too loudly.

Dreaming too much.

Certain that life would somehow work itself out.

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I sat on the floor listening to those songs for nearly two hours.

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When the final track ended, I realized something.

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I missed that version of myself.

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Not because she was happier.

Because she was simpler.

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She trusted her feelings.

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I wasn't sure I remembered how.

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Mian POV

Change was uncomfortable.

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Most people thought change became easier with practice.

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In her experience, the opposite was true.

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The more aware you became, the harder change felt.

Because you understood exactly what you were losing.

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And Mian was losing something.

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Not Isle.

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The illusion.

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The illusion that she could quietly arrange everything into place if she worked hard enough.

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The illusion that enough planning could prevent pain.

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The illusion that she could protect people from making choices she feared.

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For years those beliefs had guided her.

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Now they felt fragile.

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And she didn't know who she was without them.

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Kael POV

He noticed the difference before anyone else.

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Because unlike the others, he wasn't emotionally tangled inside the situation.

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He cared.

A great deal.

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But he still had enough distance to observe.

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And what he observed surprised him.

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Nobody was fighting.

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Nobody was trying to win.

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The conflict hadn't disappeared.

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It had evolved.

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Which was far more dangerous.

And far more meaningful.

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Because now the battle wasn't external.

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It was internal.

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Each person confronting truths they had avoided for years.

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Husband POV

He found Mian sitting alone in the library one evening.

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A thick book rested in her lap.

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She wasn't reading it.

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Just staring at the same page.

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After a moment he sat across from her.

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Neither spoke immediately.

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Silence had become easier recently.

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Not awkward.

Not hostile.

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Just quiet.

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Eventually Mian closed the book.

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"You're staring."

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The comment made him laugh.

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"I could say the same thing."

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A pause.

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Then, unexpectedly—

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She smiled.

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A genuine smile.

Small.

Brief.

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But real.

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And for some reason that made him sad.

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Because he couldn't remember the last time he had seen one.

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Husband

"You know something?"

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Mian raised an eyebrow.

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"What?"

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He leaned back in his chair.

Thinking carefully.

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"You look exhausted."

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The words slipped out before he could stop them.

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Mian blinked.

Clearly surprised.

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Then she laughed softly.

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"That's a strange thing to say."

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"Doesn't make it untrue."

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Silence.

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For a moment neither looked away.

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Then Mian sighed.

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The sound carried years of weight.

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"Maybe I am."

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Mian POV

The confession felt strange.

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Because exhaustion implied limits.

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And Mian had spent most of her life pretending she didn't have any.

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But lately?

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Lately she was tired.

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Tired of fighting invisible battles.

Tired of anticipating disaster.

Tired of carrying fears nobody else could see.

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Most of all...

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Tired of being afraid.

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Isle POV

I found Mian in the garden that night.

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She was sitting beneath the large tree.

The same place where I often sketched.

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For a moment I considered leaving.

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Then she noticed me.

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And patted the empty space beside her.

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An invitation.

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Simple.

Wordless.

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I accepted.

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For several minutes neither of us spoke.

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The evening air was cool.

The sky painted with fading orange light.

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Finally—

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"I've been thinking."

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Mian glanced toward me.

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"Dangerous activity."

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The deadpan response caught me off guard.

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A laugh escaped before I could stop it.

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And for a moment we both smiled.

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The ease of it surprised me.

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Isle

"I mean it."

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"I know."

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I looked toward the horizon.

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"You remember that promise."

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A pause.

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"I forgot it."

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The admission hurt more than expected.

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Because it felt unfair.

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Not intentionally unfair.

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Just unfair.

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Mian POV

She understood immediately.

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The guilt.

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The sadness.

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The quiet shame.

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And strangely...

she didn't want Isle carrying any of it.

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Not anymore.

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Mian

"You were eight."

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Isle looked down.

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"So were you."

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A small smile touched Mian's lips.

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"Exactly."

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The answer made Isle frown.

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Which was almost amusing.

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Mian

"You know what I remember most about that day?"

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A pause.

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"The promise?"

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Mian shook her head.

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"No."

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Silence.

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Then:

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"You shared your sandwich."

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Isle stared.

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Completely confused.

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Which made Mian laugh.

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A real laugh this time.

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"You were carrying a sandwich."

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"I know what a sandwich is."

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The dry response earned another laugh.

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Mian

"I was crying."

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A pause.

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"You gave me half your lunch and told me everything would be okay."

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The memory felt warm.

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Soft around the edges.

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Human.

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"That's what I remember."

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For a moment Isle couldn't speak.

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Because somehow that detail mattered more than the promise.

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Not less.

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More.

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Isle POV

The conversation changed something.

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Not dramatically.

Not instantly.

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But genuinely.

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Because for the first time we weren't discussing what went wrong.

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We were discussing what was real.

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The actual memories.

The actual people.

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Not symbols.

Not fears.

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Just us.

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And somehow...

that felt like progress.

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Final Scene – Isle POV

Later that night I opened my sketchbook again.

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Instead of drawing the house this time...

I drew two children sitting behind a building.

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One crying.

One holding half a sandwich.

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The drawing wasn't perfect.

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Neither was the memory.

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But that was okay.

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Because memories didn't need to be perfect to matter.

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As I finished the final line, I realized something important.

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For months I had been trying to decide who Mian was.

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A problem.

A victim.

A manipulator.

A protector.

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The truth was simpler.

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And much harder.

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She was a person.

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Just a person.

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A person who had been hurt.

Who had made mistakes.

Who had loved badly at times.

Who was trying, however imperfectly, to become better.

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And maybe...

just maybe...

so was everyone else.

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I closed the sketchbook.

Turned off the light.

And for the first time in a very long while...

fell asleep without feeling afraid of tomorrow.

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End of Chapter 63

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