Page 109 of The Dead Beast's Baby


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But still that same fire under the ash. Still that same pull.

He doesn’t speak.

So I do.

“You vanished. Blew up, apparently. Sent me nothing. No beacon. No code. Just… left me holding grief and a child I didn’t know how to raise.”

“I know.”

“You don’t.”

He moves to the sideboard, pours himself a drink from a decanter that probably costs more than most refugee ships.

He doesn’t offer me one.

Fine.

He drinks, then leans on the table, arms braced. “I didn’t send anything because if I had, they’d have traced it back to you.”

“Who?”

“Everyone. Rivals. Debt collectors. Enemies I didn’t know I had.”

I walk toward him, slow.

“You didn’t trust me to handle it?”

“I trustedmenot to make it worse.”

That throws me.

Because there’s no venom in it. Just self-loathing worn smooth by time.

He sets the glass down. “I woke up in a wrecked freighter with half a lung and no way out. By the time I clawed through the decks, I was halfway across a dead zone, no signal, no allies.”

“You could’ve found a way?—”

“Idid.But by the time I did, I watched your face light up the Holonet, cutting ribbons, building homes, carrying our son. AndI thought, ‘If I go back, I bring the worst of me with me.’ So I stayed away.”

He’s shaking.

Slight. But real.

And godsdammit, I hate him for making it make sense.

Because now I can’t hate him cleanly.

“You should’ve letmedecide,” I say.

“I know.”

Silence.

It stretches so wide I feel like I might fall through it.

He looks at me, eyes rimmed in something raw.

“Do you want me to leave?”