Chapter 631: The Illness That Opened the Door to Sothing Worse
Sophia recovered.
It did not happen all at once, nor did it feel like sothing she had achieved on her own. The strength returned to her body gradually, slipping back into her limbs in a way that felt almost unfamiliar, as though it had belonged to soone else for far too long before being given back. There had been a point during the fever when she had been certain she would not survive it, when each breath had felt too shallow and each mont too heavy, but that point had passed without her understanding how.
Even now, she could not explain why she knew this with such certainty, but the answer settled quietly within her all the sa.
Her mother had made sure of it.
The realization did not comfort her, nor did it disturb her in the way it perhaps should have. It simply existed, unquestioned, like so many other things in her life that she had learned not to examine too closely.
By the ti she could sit up without her vision spinning and stand without her knees threatening to give out beneath her, her mother had already returned to what mattered most to her.
"What have you seen?"
The question ca without preamble, without concern for how Sophia felt or whether she had fully recovered. It was always the sa, asked in the sa tone, carrying the sa expectation that pressed against Sophia’s chest in a way that made it difficult to answer even when the answer was simple.
"I haven’t seen anything," Sophia replied quietly. "I really don’t understand what you want to see."
It was the truth.
Or at least, it was the only truth she had to offer.
Her mother’s gaze sharpened at once, and though her expression did not change much, the shift in the air was imdiate. There was sothing in the way she looked at Sophia then, sothing that made it clear that the answer was not acceptable.
"You don’t understand?" she asked.
Sophia shook her head.
"I don’t understand."
Her mother looked at her in disgust. Every ti Sophia saw that particular look on her face, sothing broke in her. She didn’t want to disappoint her mother. She didn’t want to be that girl, but she had very little choice in the matter. She could not see what she did not understand she was ant to see, and her mother didn’t understand that. If anything, she thought Sophia was lying to her.
Throughout the ti Sophia had been sick, her mother had demanded visions over and over again, and each ti Sophia told her she had not seen anything, she left, banging the door to Sophia’s room as she did.
And each ti, Sophia would whisper out an apology.
It beca a pattern after that.
Her mother would co, ask the sa question, and each ti Sophia would give the sa answer. And each ti, the response she received would be the sa in return—that quiet, cutting look that told her she was failing in a way she could not even begin to fix.
Ti passed, though it did so unevenly, slipping forward in fragnts that did not always connect.
And then she was six.
That was when things shifted.
She had not ant for it to happen. At least, that was what she told herself later, when she tried to understand how sothing so small could lead to sothing that would stay with her for so long.
Her mother had always been clear about the rules. Sophia was not to leave the house. She was not to wander, not to interact with others, not to step beyond the boundaries that had been set for her. The rules had been repeated often enough that they no longer felt like instructions but rather sothing absolute, sothing that simply existed.
And yet, there had been monts when the house felt too quiet, when the silence stretched too far and pressed too tightly against her chest.
On one of those days, she left.
It had not been difficult. Her mother was not always there, and Sophia had learned, in the way children sotis do without realizing it, how to move carefully enough to avoid notice. The mont she stepped outside, sothing inside her eased, sothing she had not realized had been tense until it finally loosened.
That was where she t them.
The other children.
Leon, the leader of their group, Caron, and Anastasia.
She rembered their nas now, and she rembered how spending ti with them made her feel.
They had not looked at her with expectation or scrutiny, had not treated her like sothing fragile or strange. They had simply welcod her into their gas as though she had always belonged there.
They taught her how to play, how to move without hesitation, how to laugh without waiting for permission.
And Sophia, who had never known that she was allowed to do those things, followed along with a quiet eagerness she did not question.
It felt good.
It felt right.
Each day, she sneaked out to et them, but she was always quick to head back ho—until the day she lost herself in the mont. Until the day she stayed longer than she should have.
The rain had started slowly, a light drizzle that should have been reason enough to stop, but none of them paid it any attention. They kept playing, kept laughing, and Sophia, caught up in sothing she had never experienced before, did not think to leave.
By the ti she realized how late it had beco, the rain had already soaked through her clothes, clinging to her skin and weighing her down.
Panic ca quickly after that.
She ran ho as fast as she could, her breath uneven, her heart pounding for reasons that had nothing to do with the exertion.
She did not know what to do when she got there.
She only knew that she could not let her mother find out.
So she hid.
She climbed onto her bed without changing, pulling the covers around herself as though that alone could erase what had already happened. If she stayed still enough, if she pretended well enough, then maybe it would be enough.
But exhaustion caught up to her before anything else could.
She fell asleep like that, still damp, still cold.
And when she woke, the fever had already taken hold.
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