<b>Chapter </b><b>119 </b>
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He lifted his hand, and a circle of air a few paces away went still and bright, a polished coin waiting for a stamp. “Gate primed,” he said. “Keyed to our names.”
Noah squeezed my hip, grounding me back into my body. “We’ll make the kids lunch here after,” he said, practical as a prayer. “We keep the day ordinary where we can.”
“Ordinary,” I echoed, letting the word tame the edges of the fear. I took onest nce at Elliot’s door. The ward hummed. The vines hugged. Layah’s presence smoothed like a
hand on my back.
“Let’s go,” I said. “We’ve got a family to brief.”
Levi touched the gate and spoke the first name. The air turned, and beyond it the war room’s map table red to life, Red Moon’s borders drawn in ink and river stone. One room, two worlds, one wall we would not let break.
Behind us, the decoy door took another soft tap. The third thread tried its new word again, hopeful as a child repeating a lesson.
“Child,” it breathed to a room that wasn’t ours. We didn’t answer. We were busy building
thenguage of no.
Levi’s gate hangs in the corridor like a polished coin, still, bright, waiting. He speaks the names one by one, and the surface ripples each time like a breath taken in.
“Mum, Dad.” The war room resolves on the other side: my father at the head of the map table, sleeves rolled, river stones anchoring the borders. “Xavier. Haiden. Aleisha.
Tommy.<b>” </b>
They look up as if we’ve stepped through, though neither side crosses the threshold. One room<b>, </b>two ces. It’s a neat trick, and I’m grateful for the neat ones today.
“Report,” Dad says, but there’s gentleness under themand. Noah gives them the bones: the seeker–weave nosing Elliot’s ward, Levi’s mirror–snare catching a reflection,
the decoy room down the linen corridor.
“Twice now it used the same word,” I finish. “Kin. And the third thread, smaller….said child.” <b>I </b>look down the table, make sure itnds. “This isn’t a random swarm. It’s a
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search.<b>” </b>
Tommy leans in, forearms braced on the wood. “Soul Eater craft?”
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Levi’s mouth pulls thin. “Close enough to call it that. It’s sympathetic magic: keyed to a soulprint, trained to trail and wait. The hands that rode the rogues used a harsher weave; this one is patient. Different casters. Same quarry.”
Haiden whistles low through his teeth. “So we’ve got more than one set of eyes in our
trees.”
“Not just eyes.” Aleisha studies the map, then me. “Ears. That ‘kin‘ isn’t for us. It’s for him. Call and response. See if the door knows the word.”
Silence settles over the map like a held breath. I can feel the moment the room tips, when possibility hardens into the thing we all already know.
Dad is first to say it aloud. “They’re not hunters,” he says quietly. “They’re kin–seekers.”
Xavier’s jaw works once. He hates the admission, not the logic. “Kin–seekers who rode rogues into our yard,” he says, but there’s less argument in it than steel. “Family or not,
they don’t get a free pass<b>.</b><b>” </b>
Noah’s voice is even. “They’re his people in some way, blood, species, culture. They think
the word kin is a key.<b>” </b>
Aleisha taps a finger against the edge of the map, eyes far. “They’re teaching their threads anguage. Kin. Child. Next they’ll try home.” Her gaze flicks to me. “We don’t let them
tell the story first.”
Levi’s mouth is thin, but he nods. “Agreed. Our choice is not between silence and surrender. It’s whether we shape the contact or react to it.”
Tommy huffs a breath that isn’t quite augh. “So we put a letter under the door and tell
them the rules<b>.</b><b>” </b>
“Or we invite them to a vestibule that looks like a door and is actually my fist,” Haiden says, deadpan. The corner of his mouth lifts. “Kidding. Mostly.”
My hand smooths over the river stones, anchoring borders that suddenly feel more like
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vows than lines. “We put the idea on the table:munication, with conditions so strict they choke out any danger.” I look to Dad. “We draft terms. We choose the ground. We decide the hour.
Xavier blows out a slow breath. “If it saves us weeks of them gnawing at our fence with threads, I’ll sit on a rock and glower while Levi ys diplomat.”
*I’m not the diplomat,” Levi says mildly. “I’m the wall that listens.” He nces at me. “But I can carry a message.”
“Not from Elliot.” The words leave me before anyone can suggest it. “Not in his voice. Not signed with anything that smells like my boy. Ites from us, his guardians.”
“Then let’s say it,” Noah adds, and even the map seems to lean closer. “We acknowledge the rumor. We state he is under our protection, healthy, and not avable for im. We set a singlewful path to dialogue. One envoy, unarmed, under a truth–knot, at a neutral site. Any attempt to approach outside those terms is hostile.”
Dad nods once. “Lake Narra sandbar.”
Tommy lifts a hand. “Before we stamp the invitation: we anchor contingencies. Perimeter teams on both banks. Wards under the sand, iron, salt, holy water. No riders, no threads, no mours. If anything twitches wrong, we close the vestibule and cut the line.”
“Done,” Xavier says, already shifting stones, already moving pieces on a board no one else
can see. “Haiden can seed passive wards on the approach. No one gets within two hundred yards without tripping a bell.”
Levi sketches quick sigils into the gate’s light, uses, conditions, the shape of the knot that will bite a liar’s tongue. “The truth–binding will sit on the envoy’s name. If they try to borrow a face, the knot will fail and I’ll feel it snap.”
Haiden leans back, hands in pockets. “And if they bring us a child of their own to soften our edges?”
“Then they learn we have edges either way,” Noah says. It isn’t cruel. It’s simple.
“Elliot?” Dad asks me. “Does he sit this meeting?”
“He sits the family briefing,<b>” </b>I answer. “He hears Soul Eater from our mouths, not the
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dark. He learns the posture is not fear, it’s choice. He does not see the envoy. He does not carry the weight of anyone else’s words.”
Levi’s eyes soften. “And we keep training. Masking on breath, mirror–snares automatic, saying no so a door believes him<b>.</b><b>” </b>
“We keep the decoy door open,” Aleisha says, “and we keep listening. They’ll say more if they think someone friendly is on the other side.”
“Friendly doesn’t mean foolish,” Noah murmurs.
“Never has,” Dad agrees. He straightens, the old general lining up with the man who taught us to hold hands crossing a road. “Alright. We send a message into the dark on our
terms. Levi?”
“I’ll speak it through the false room,” Levi says. “Not a voice, an impression. A hearth with rules. They’ll understand the shape even if they hate it.”