Leo's last morning at The Cabin arrived without ceremony.
He ca down at six, made coffee, and stood on the porch for a while looking at the Pacific. The others would be up soon. Hayes had the departure ti scheduled for nine. The season would continue without him - Asher and Zoey and Gordon and the others still had another week but Leo's part of it was done.
He had been a guest for nine days. He had a cooking competition, caught an unreasonable fish, watched episodes of Anohana with a group of people who hadn't known each other before this, and addressed forty million people about a PR scandal that had collapsed in approximately twelve hours. It had been, objectively, a productive nine days.
Gordon appeared in the kitchen doorway at six-fifteen. He looked at Leo on the porch and went to make his own coffee without being asked.
They stood in companionable silence for a while.
"Tilly watched episode eight," Gordon said finally.
"What did she think?"
"She texted a single word." Gordon drank his coffee. "The word was 'Seraphina.'"
Leo nodded. That was the correct response.
The goodbyes were brief, which was the right length. Gordon shook Leo's hand and held it a second longer than necessary. Zoey Foster said episode eleven and Leo said yes and she made a sound of resigned dread that was also appreciation. Marcus Lane, who had already left two days earlier, had sent a ssage at 5 AM: I started making changes. It's working.
Asher Reed walked Leo to the car. They stood beside it for a mont.
"You know what's coming," Asher said. Not a question.
"Yes."
"All of it? Episode nine, ten, eleven - you know exactly what happens."
"I wrote it."
Asher was quiet for a mont. "And you still watched it every night with us."
"That's different from knowing," Leo said. He opened the car door. "Take care of yourself, Asher."
"Yeah." Asher stepped back. "You too, Director."
Episode nine of Anohana had dropped the previous evening, while Leo was still at The Cabin for one final night. The group had watched it together - the last episode viewing before his departure.
The firework permission had co through in the episode's first half. Yukiatsu, who had spent eight episodes being the show's most controlled character, had gone to nma's father and done the thing nobody expected: gotten on his knees. Not as performance, not as strategy — just because he was twenty years old and had run out of other ways to ask.
I loved iko-san, your daughter. I want to do sothing for her.
nma's father had sat with it for a long mont. Then agreed.
The group working on the firework together - Jintan and Poppo and Anaru alongside the maker, learning the parts, nma bouncing around them invisible and delighted, Poppo discovering she'd climbed onto his back and standing completely still because he couldn't see her but could sohow feel the weight of her presence — had been the episode's warst fifteen minutes. Five people who could barely look at each other two months ago, choosing to try anyway.
Gordon had watched the Poppo scene without speaking. At the end of it he'd said, quietly, "I understand what you cast him for now."
Asher had looked at the floor.
Then, near the river — the other scene.
nma had seen a koi fish and gone toward the water to look at it. Just that: curiosity, childlike and uncalculating. But the river was where she had died.
Jintan had moved without thinking.
He'd grabbed her arm. Pulled her back. And what ca out of his mouth wasn't planned, it was the thing that had been sitting in him for nine episodes, finally losing patience with being contained.
Stay here forever.
On screen, the words hung there. nma looked at him. He looked back. Neither of them moved.
At The Cabin, nobody said anything for a long mont.
Stay... stay here, he said again, quieter. As if saying it twice made it sothing other than what it was.
Mary had both hands pressed flat on the table. "He said it."
"He's been saying it," Ryan said softly, "since episode one. He just didn't have the words."
The Global Stream comnt section had gone into a specific kind of quiet, not the explosive chaos of the phone calls or the dress reveal, but sothing slower and more personal. The kind that cos when a show finds the exact thing a very large number of people have been carrying:
[He's been dreading episode ten since episode one. He doesn't want the wish granted. He wants her to stay. That's the whole truth of this show.]
[Stay here forever. I'm going to hear that line for the rest of my life.]
[Anaru left when she realized, if the wish gets granted, nma disappears. She loves him enough to be sad about that. The show just keeps doing this.]
On the plane back to Los Angeles, Leo opened the JJK Season 2 production notes.
Sydney had done thorough work in the ten days he'd been away. The casting additions were mostly confird. Harrison Reed had taken the Choso offer without hesitation. The first table read was scheduled for next week.
He made three notes in the margins. Closed the file. Opened it again, made one more note about the Prison Realm sequence, then closed it for good.
Outside the window, the California coast appeared, Los Angeles spreading below, the city where all of it had started. He'd built Celestial Peak here in eighteen months from a whiteboard and a sister who wasn't sure he could do it. He was about to build the Shibuya arc, which was the hardest thing he'd yet put on screen - in scope, in emotional weight, in the specific difficulty of adapting a story where the character everyone loves most disappears from it.
He already knew how to do it.
He was looking forward to it anyway.
At the edge of his vision, almost nothing, the faint residue of cursed energy that the Six Eyes registered automatically, the way an ear catches a frequency below conscious hearing. He'd noticed it twice now, near the Celestial Peak offices. Just a trace. Barely there.
Not yet sothing he needed to address. But sothing.
He closed the window shade and went back to the production notes. There was still so much to do.
Plz Drop So Power Stones.
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