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Chapter 16 - What Grows In The Dark

last update publish date: 2026-06-27 03:35:00

The first time she played the piano, she cried.

It wasn't a grand instrument. It was a battered, dusty upright electronic keyboard—sixty-one keys, battery-powered, discovered by Kai in the ruins of a derelict youth center two blocks away during a midnight supply run. He had brought it back under his arm without a word of explanation, setting it silently against the damp concrete wall of the safehouse before returning to his watch.

She had stared at the plastic keys for four full days before she dared to touch them.

She didn't know how to play. She had absorbed the fundamentals of music theory from an online course she’d hijacked at sixteen—squeezed between hacking forums and structural engineering manuals, because back then, knowledge was the only currency that kept her safe. She understood intervals and chord progressions mathematically, but she had never owned an instrument.

At two in the morning on the fifth night, the air freezing enough to turn her breath to mist, she sat on the folding stool Kai had left for her and pressed her fingers into the plastic keys.

She played raw scales first. Then mathematical intervals. Then, very slowly, building outward from pure theory, she let her fingers find a melody. It wasn't a song she had ever heard before. It poured out of whatever dark, heavy reservoir was sitting in her chest that she had not yet found words for—the biting anger she filed away daily, the profound grief she contained to keep her mind sharp, and the vast, terrifying tenderness that arrived every single time she felt a phantom flutter beneath her ribs.

The melody wasn't beautiful in any classical sense. It was hesitant, fractured, wandering through minor keys. But it was entirely hers, built from raw human sensation, and by the third minute, she was weeping silently.

Not dramatically. Quietly, the way she did everything—a steady, private dissolution in the dark. She allowed it because she was alone, because Kai was glued to the perimeter console, because Marcus was dead to the world, and because she had been holding herself together with the structural integrity of a corporate firewall for three months. Something had to release the pressure, or the entire architecture would fail.

She played until the tears dried on her cheeks. Then she dried her hands on her sweater, composed a tight chord sequence, and memorized it.

She played it the next night. And the night after that.

By the end of the week, Kai had quietly adjusted the angle of the folding stool to better support her changing posture. He never mentioned the crying. She didn't either. It was the foundation of why she trusted him completely: he understood that some things weren't meant to be managed or fixed. They were just meant to be witnessed.

At the sixteen-week medical appointment—conducted by Marcus with a smuggled, portable ultrasound machine at six in the morning—something fundamental shifted.

Movement.

Not the faint, cellular vibrations of the early weeks, but real, unambiguous, deliberate life. Four distinct signatures on the grainy monitor, moving with a fierce, independent purpose.

Marcus let out a soft, breathy, "Ah," his voice full of the wonder of a sixty-one-year-old physician being reminded of exactly why he had entered medicine in the first place.

Evelyn said nothing. Her eyes were locked on the small screen, counting the pulses.

Four. All four moving. All four surviving. The tiny, living proof of a terrifying reality she hadn't actively chosen, but had decided, with every fiber of her being, to protect from the world.

"The eldest is particularly active this morning," Marcus observed, pointing a calloused finger at a tiny silhouette.

"He always is," Evelyn said. The conviction in her voice surprised her, as did the sudden choice of pronoun.

Marcus looked up, adjusting his glasses. "You know their spirits already?"

"I can read the telemetry," Evelyn said, stopping herself because the clinical explanation felt hollow. "He feels deliberate," she whispered instead. "Like he's already trying to solve an encryption."

Marcus smiled gently, placing a warm hand on her shoulder. "That is the most Evelyn Marceau sentence I have ever heard in my life."

She stared at the screen for a long time. Four distinct presences. Four futures she was actively keeping out of the hands of a man who had categorized them as a mere inheritance mechanism on a legal addendum.

"Their names," Marcus said softly, turning down the machine's contrast. "Have you thought about what to call them?"

She had. She had been naming them in the dark since the night she saw the positive test strips. But saying them aloud made them real in a way that even a heartbeat on a screen couldn't fully mirror.

"Cael," she said, her voice steadying. "Lyra. Remy." She paused, feeling the fourth name settle into the concrete room like a promise. "Serafine."

Marcus repeated them under his breath, tasting each syllable. "Strong names, Evelyn."

"They have to be," she said, her eyes returning to the dark screen. "They're going to inherit a war."

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