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Chapter 64 - [64] Uncomfortable Quarters

Chapter 64: Uncomfortable Quarters

The Ancient One's portal tore through reality like a knife, spilling golden light onto the dusty Texas parking lot where we'd left the Rust Bucket. I stumbled through, my stomach lurching from the dimensional shift. My legs betrayed me for a second, but I caught myself before eating dirt. Real heroic.

"Border crossing without the hassle," Grandpa Max said, stretching his back with an audible pop. "No paperwork, no questions, just magical immigration."

"That's not funny, Grandpa," Gwen muttered, though the corner of her mouth twitched upward slightly. She must be glad to see him joke again.

Charmcaster lingered at the portal's edge, charm bag clutched tight against her chest. When the golden light finally collapsed behind her, something in her posture changed, a barely perceptible tensing, like a wild animal suddenly realizing the cage door had shut.

"Inside," Grandpa said, eyeing the empty parking lot. "Before someone starts asking questions we can't answer."

The familiar creak of the Rust Bucket's door hit differently now, less like coming home and more like the sound of a space that was about to get way too small. The RV's interior, with its worn upholstery and lingering smell of Grandpa's cooking experiments, suddenly felt like contested territory.

Charmcaster paused at the threshold, her eyes cataloging every inch of the space. Not admiring but calculating.

"It's not much," Grandpa said, "but it's shelter."

She stepped inside as if she were entering enemy territory, which, I suppose, she was.

Gwen had already reclaimed her spot, books spread across the dinette table in a pattern too deliberate to be accidental. When Charmcaster set her charm bag on the counter, Gwen casually shifted her laptop, knocking the bag to the floor.

"Oh," Gwen said flatly. "My bad."

Charmcaster said nothing, just picked up her bag and placed it on the shelf near my pull-out couch. The moment Gwen turned away, I caught the subtle finger movement, the whispered word. The bag vanished and reappeared exactly where Gwen had knocked it from.

I bit back a groan. This was going to be a long night.

"So," I started, desperate to break the growing tension, "food? I'm starving after all that crazy–"

"Where exactly am I supposed to sleep?" Charmcaster's question sliced through my attempt at normalcy.

The RV suddenly felt even smaller. Three beds. Four people. Even without Gwen's math skills, I could spot the problem.

"We'll figure something," Grandpa began.

"Not with me," Gwen cut in. "My bunk barely fits one."

Charmcaster's laugh was sharp and brittle. "Relax, princess. Sharing your precious space is the last thing I want."

Something in Gwen's expression shifted, a flash of what looked almost like... insecurity? Before I could process it, she'd retreated behind her usual wall of sarcasm.

"Then where exactly do you plan to sleep? The roof?"

"I'll take the floor," I said, immediately regretting opening my mouth. "Charmcaster can have the couch."

Both girls turned to me with nearly identical expressions, half surprise, half suspicion. Gwen's eyes narrowed, darting between me and Charmcaster with a calculation I recognized from when she was solving particularly difficult puzzles.

"No," she said flatly. "You're not sleeping on the floor."

"Playing hero again, Tennyson?" Charmcaster raised an eyebrow. "How predictable."

"I was just being considerate. You can take the floor if you don't like it."

"Enough," Grandpa's voice carried the weight of decades of command. The Ancient One had personally asked him to take care of Charmcaster for a while, that was why he was letting her stay here. And he wasn't going to go back on his words. "Ben, grab the canvas from the external compartment. We're making a hammock."

Twenty minutes of creative engineering later, we had a hammock strung across the RV's main living area. It looked precarious at best, but it would hold. Probably.

"Temporary solution," Grandpa said, voice carefully neutral. "It'd be unsightly to make a lady sleep here. Ben can sleep on this. Until we figure out next steps."

Charmcaster nodded, one finger trailing along my new makeshift bedding. I didn't miss how she positioned herself to keep all of us in view, or how her charm bag never left her reach.

"Great," Gwen muttered, shoving books into her backpack. "Magical refugee crisis."

"Gwen," I warned, but too late.

Charmcaster's face went carefully blank, the kind of non-expression that somehow felt more dangerous than anger.

"Don't worry," she said, voice flat. "I'll be out of your hair soon enough."

"The sooner the better," Gwen shot back. "We've got enough problems without–"

"Without what?" The temperature in the RV seemed to drop several degrees. "Without someone like me? Someone who doesn't fit into your perfect little family vacation?"

The words filled the air like smoke. Grandpa cleared his throat, a tactical interruption if I'd ever heard one.

"Everyone out," he said, already grabbing his wallet. "We're getting food. Real food. In a place where two little kids can't destroy my home with their magic."

The diner looked like it had been serving the same greasy burgers since the 1950s. We slid into a booth, Grandpa and me on one side, the girls across from us, separated by approximately three feet and several centuries' worth of grudges.

Our waitress took our orders with the efficiency of someone who'd seen too much to be surprised by anything, not even a family that included a kid with a weird watch, a girl with pink-glowing jewelry, and a silver-haired teen in clothes that screamed "evil sorceress."

Charmcaster ordered enough food for three people, something Gwen immediately noticed.

"Hungry?" she asked, the question edged with judgment.

"When you live on the run, you eat when you can." Charmcaster didn't bother looking up from the menu. "Something a pampered little witch wouldn't understand."

I watched her unconsciously position her arm around her plate when the food arrived, a subtle, protective gesture that told me more about her past than any sob story could have. She ate quickly and efficiently, as if someone were expecting her meal to be taken away at any moment.

It made me a little sad. I was wondering how her backstory fit in the Marvel universe. I was unsure if the Ledger Domain existed. Maybe it's "Limbo" in this world? The same place where the Mutant Sorceress, Magik, became the Queen. Sounds pretty similar. 

Gwen noticed too. For a second, something like understanding flickered across her face. Then she picked up her knife and fork, cutting her burger with exaggerated precision.

"Some of us have manners," she said under her breath.

Come on, Gwen. I kicked her shin under the table.

"Ow!" Her fork clattered against her plate. "What's your problem?"

"Enough," I said quietly. "We just fought an immortal vampire and had a literal goddess lecture us about cosmic philosophy. Maybe the territory marking can wait?"

"For the records, Gwendolyn, I disagree with your Hero Cousin. The world's always ending, you know?" Charmcaster said between bites. "That's what makes these petty conflicts so meaningful."

Grandpa sighed, shoulders slumping with exhaustion. "Girls, please. We're all tired. We're all processing. Let's just eat and–"

"And what?" Gwen's voice rose slightly. "Pretend we're not harboring someone who tried to kill us? Multiple times?"

"Did I? I was just trying to subdue Hulk. I don't recall any murder attempts. Besides, that's ancient history," Charmcaster said with a dismissive wave.

"It was two weeks ago!"

"Like I said." She set down her burger, meeting Gwen's glare with a cold smile. "It's back when I thought any of this mattered… Before I understood we're all just pieces in a game played by forces that don't care if we live or die. Don't worry, after not interested in the Hulk anymore."

The nihilism in her voice made me a little sympathetic. I'd admit her looks were one of the reasons, but still. She had a point, she never tried to kill us. This wasn't just the villain we'd fought. This was someone hollowed out by loss and betrayal, someone who was used by her uncle but endured it for the sake of her goal, and yet now, she lost her entire purpose, ripped apart by divine words.

"There's always a point, Hope," I found myself saying. "We make our own choices. That matters. I won't say I understand what it feels like to lose your father, or what it feels like to hear you can't bring him back, but… that's not the end of life."

Gwen fell quiet, surprise evident in her face. Ah right, she didn't see Charmcaster ask Quetzalcoatl question about her father. If she had, she might not have been this harsh toward the poor girl.

Charmcaster shifted to me, her expression unreadable. "Says the boy carrying the most powerful weapon in the galaxy. Must be nice to believe your choices are your own."

I had no answer for that.

This was really difficult. How do you help a person who's unsure about her life, who might have already lost the will to live? I hope she'd let us help.

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