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Chapter 19 - CH 19: The Choice

Marcus

The house felt wrong.

Not empty or quiet but off.

I stood in the living room,

staring at nothing in particular. The same couch. The same table. The same

faint smell of coffee that had somehow refused to disappear.

Everything was still here.

Except the people who made it

matter.

My grip tightened slightly at

my side.

"You can't stay in between

forever."

Callie's voice echoed in my

head.

I exhaled slowly.

Yeah, I knew That but it

didn't make it easier.

I stepped outside just as the

sun dipped lower into the horizon.

She was already there.

Leaning against the gate like

she'd been waiting.

Of course she had.

"You always did take your

time," she said without looking at me.

I frowned slightly. "Thought

you said I had a choice."

"You do," she replied. "That

doesn't mean I wont be impatient about it."

I almost smile.

Silence settled between us for

a moment.

"That person," I said. "The

one watching."

Her expression shifted

slightly.

"Seraphina," she said.

So that was her name.

"She trained you?" I asked.

Callie nodded.

My eyes narrowed slightly.

"How?" the question came out

sharper than I meant it to.

"You were the one training," I

added. "Not me."

Her lips pressed into a thin

line.

"For a while," she said.

That wasn't an answer so I

waited.

She sighed quietly.

"She found me after the fire,"

she said. "I didn't even know where I was. I thought-"

She stopped and swallowed then

continued.

"I thought you were dead."

That landed. Hard.

"I stayed with her," she went

on. "At first because I had nowhere else to go. Then… because I realized what

she was."

"And what is she?" I asked.

"Stronger than anything you've

seen so far." That wasn't comforting. At all.

"She's family," Callie added.

"Azzurro blood. Same as us."

That word again.

Family.

It didn't feel simple anymore.

"She's been protecting you,"

Callie said. "From a distance."

"Without telling me."

"You weren't ready." I let out

a quiet breath.

"Yeah. I've heard that one."

She didn't argue.

Just let the silence sit and somehow

that made it easier to listen.

"She's the one who taught me

everything I know," Callie said. "How to fight. How to control what we are."

"What we are," I repeated.

My gaze dropped briefly to the

bracelet.

"You said I have a choice," I

said finally.

She nodded. "You do."

"And if I say no?"

Her expression didn't change.

"Then I leave," she said. "And

you stay Marcus."

Just Marcus.

The words felt heavier than

they should have.

"And everything else?" I

asked.

"The truth," she said. "The

past. What's coming."

A pause.

"You'd be choosing not to

know."

That… hit differently. Because

it wasn't just about danger.

It was about ignorance. About

pretending.

I looked away. Towards the

street.

"I could finish school," I

said. "Take my exams. Go to college. Live a normal life."

"You could," she agreed.

"And you?" I asked.

"I'd keep fighting," she said.

"With or without you."

Something in my chest

tightened.

I didn't like the idea of her

out there alone. Again.

"You're younger than me," I

said.

"You've said that already."

"Yeah, and it still matters."

A faint spark of the old

Callie flashed in her eyes.

"No," she muttered. "it

doesn't. not anymore."

That stung. Because a part of

me knew she was right.

 

"I need time," I said.

"You don't have much," she

replied.

"Then I'll use what I have."

She studied me for a moment

then nodded once.

"I'll be nearby," she said.

Of course, she would.

 

The cliff felt colder that

evening.

Or maybe it was just me.

Noah and Riley were already

there.

Riley stood the second she saw

me.

"What did she say?" straight

to it.

Noah stayed quiet, watching.

I sat down slowly. "She gave

me a choice."

"That doesn't sound good."

Riley frowned.

"It's not," I said.

"What kind of choice?" Noah

asked.

"Stay here," I said. "Or go

with her."

Silence.

"You're not actually thinking

about going, are you?" Riley asked.

I didn't answer immediately.

That was enough.

Her expression hardened.

"Marcus-"

"She's my sister," I said.

"And you don't know her

anymore," Riley shot back.

I exhaled slowly. "She didn't

lie."

"That doesn't mean she told

you everything."

Noah leaned forward slightly.

"What happens if you go?" he

asked.

"I train," I said. "I learn

what all of this is. What I am."

"And if you don't?" Riley

pressed.

"I stay here."

"With us," she added.

That part wasn't said lightly.

I looked at her. At both of

them.

This was my life.

Or at least, the one I

understood.

"She said I'd be choosing not

to know," I said quietly.

"Not to know what?" Noah

frowned.

"Everything."

The word hung in the air.

Riley looked away briefly then

back at me.

"And what do you want?" she

asked.

That question...

Simple yet impossible.

I thought about the fire,

about my parents.

My jaw tightened. " I want

answers," I said.

"And if those answers cost you

this?" Riley asked.

I didn't respond immediately.

Because I didn't have one.

Noah spoke up quietly.

"Whatever you choose," he

said, " just don't disappear on us."

I let out a small breath. "I

won't."

"You better not," Riley added.

"And try not to die," Noah

said.

I smiled lightly.

"Low expectations."

"I'm serious."

"I know."

That night, I stood outside my

house again.

Same place with different

feeling.

I looked at the bracelet

again. Then I clenched my hands.

"I'm not done," I said

quietly.

Not to anyone just to the

silence.

To the past. To whatever was

coming.

Footsteps behind me.

I didn't turn.

"I figured," Callie said.

I exhaled slowly then face

her.

"I'm going with you."

Her expression didn't change

much but her shoulders relaxed slightly.

"Good," she said.

I held her gaze.

"This isn't about

destiny," I added. "or whatever you

think I'm supposed to be."

"Then what is it about?"

My jaw tightened. "My

parents," I said.

The air went still.

"I'm going to find out what

happened," I continued. "And when I do…"

I didn't finish the sentence.

I didn't need to. Because she understood. I could see it in her eyes.

She nodded once.

"Then we start tomorrow."

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