Eve
I watched them load up Elliot's belongings as he sat perched on my hip. He refused to let me out of his sight since he woke up. I fed him, and he fed me—the best he could.
My eyes traced the new items that had been brought for him by Hades when it had been decided that he would stay with me. Too bad new items didn't mean new beginnings.
Too bad toys couldn't erase trauma.
Too bad a brand-new sweater couldn't warm a child's soul where it had already gone cold from fear.
The duffel was filled with carefully folded clothes, books he didn't read, puzzles with missing pieces—just like him. Just like me.
Elliot's small fingers clutched the fabric of my top tighter, as if sensing the direction of my thoughts.
"It's just for a while," I whispered, brushing my lips over his temple. "No one's taking you anywhere."
He didn't respond with words. He just nodded—tiny, solemn—his face half-hidden against my neck.
There was no tantrum. No crying. That was the part that broke me.
He had learned too well that silence was safer than sound.
And I... I hated that he'd had to.
A soft knock came at the doorframe. Hades walked in and Elliot didn't have to turn around to brace as though waiting for an explosion.
"I thought it was agreed that you would vacate while I got his things for him?" Instinctively holding him tighter to me.
Hades lips were pursed into a hard line, jaw clenched as he marched towards me without a word.
Only when I took a step back, did he stop. He still emanated death and decay, his skin so pale that I sure if the sun shined on him, he would be translucent.
Hades didn't speak at first.
He just stood there—still as a statue, tense as a coiled wire. His fists were clenched at his sides, nails half-mooned into his palms like he was trying to keep something caged. Maybe it was the Flux. Maybe it was himself.
"I want to apologize to him," he said finally, his voice low, hoarse—like it scraped his throat on the way out.
Elliot whimpered against my collarbone, body locking up.
"Hades—" I started, but he held up a hand.
"I can't make him forgive me," he said quickly, eyes flicking between me and the trembling boy in my arms. "I don't expect that. I don't deserve that. But he deserves to hear it. Even if he never wants to see me again."
I searched his face. There was no arrogance there. No edge of command. Only a kind of exhausted desperation.
I looked down at Elliot, still curled into me like a shadow. "Hey," I whispered, rubbing gentle circles into his back. "Can you look at me?"
It took a while, but he did. Just barely.
I smiled, small and soft. "He wants to say sorry. That's all. He won't come close unless you want him to. You can stay right here with me. I won't let go."
Elliot didn't sign anything. But after a beat, he gave the faintest nod. Barely a movement. But a yes.
I turned back to Hades. "Keep your distance. Speak from there."
Hades nodded once. His jaw trembled, but he didn't step forward. His voice, when it came again, cracked under the weight of guilt.
"Elliot… I don't know if you can ever understand how sorry I am. For everything." He swallowed, the motion shaky. "I wasn't myself. But that doesn't excuse it. I let something inside me hurt the person I swore I'd protect. That I was supposed to protect."
He exhaled, and the sound was broken. "You were never a mistake. Never something I wished away. You were—are—my son. And I didn't see you. I saw my own failures and let them speak louder than your voice."
Elliot didn't move. But he was listening. I felt it in the way his breathing had changed—shallow, but still. Present.
His voice dropped to a whisper. "I love you. That hasn't changed. It never will."
I waited for Elliot to respond. He didn't. He only turned his face away and tucked it back into my shoulder.
Hades nodded like that was the answer he expected.
Then he turned around, shoulders sagging under the weight of what he hadn't gotten to fix. "This would be so simple." His voice had changed, his tone had dropped so low I could feel the revibration in my gut. My heart lurched in my chest.
The Flux.
Just as another worker walked for another round of items, I made my way out with Elliot or at least I tried to...
Absolutely. Here's the continuation of that powerful, emotionally charged scene:
His hand snapped out and clamped around my wrist.
"Elysia…"
The sound of it—how he said it—made my stomach turn. It wasn't Hades. Not the man I'd once loved, not the broken thing who'd just begged our son for forgiveness.
And that— freeweɓnovel.cѳm
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