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“Why?”

“Because it’s not justmysecret anymore.”

And there it is.

I freeze. Something shifts. Heavy. Immense.

Not just her secret.

“What does that mean?” I whisper.

She shakes her head, eyes shimmering. “Don’t push me, Vael. Please.”

I take another step back. My mouth tastes like copper.

“You’re a better liar when you’re not crying,” I mutter, barely loud enough for her to hear.

She gasps.

And I leave.

Because if I stay, I’ll do something stupid. Again. Like kiss her back. Or beg.

Or worse — tell her that I’d forgive her for anything.

CHAPTER 9

RYNN

My comm chirps just after midday, sharp and clinical.

I see the name before the tone finishes sounding.

Instructor Delma - Little Sprockets Early Academy.

My stomach drops.

No one's supposed to call during clinic hours unless it's urgent. Nessa knows how to behave. Sheknows. I drilled it into her — no screaming, no climbing too high, no running when you’re upset.

The comm screen buzzes again. A soft, insistent pulse. I answer.

“Dr. Sorala,” Delma says, voice as tight as her iron-stiff braids. “There’s been an incident.”

Fifteen minutes later, I’m sitting in a too-small chair, knees practically at my chest, in the back office of the preschool wing. The pastel walls mock me with their cheerful murals of cartoon animals. A giant smiling asteroid gives me a thumbs-up from the corner.

Delma’s face is stony. She taps her compad, and the playback begins.

Nessa sits on the floor in a circle of other toddlers, holding her favorite purple-glow raptor. Her scales shimmer faintly under the indoor lights — subtle enough to pass, at least when she’s calm.

The moment unfolds slowly.

A human boy—Julen, I think his name is—reaches for the raptor, yanks it out of her hands.

Nessa’s mouth opens. She doesn’t scream. Doesn’t cry.

Sheroars.

It’s not a sound a child her age should make. Low, guttural, from the chest like something ancient.