Chapter 6: The Pressure Cooker
The magic didn’t just seep; it began to boil over.
It started in small ways. The toaster stopped producing burnt prophecies and began to sing. Specifically, at 7:15 AM precisely, it would emit a tiny, yet unmistakable rendition of the chorus from “Total Eclipse of the Heart” before ejecting the toast. My father, once a man of quiet routine, now stood before it each morning with a look of profound resignation as if waiting for a tiny, carb-based oracle to speak.
Then, the mirrors. Any reflective surface, the toaster’s side, the microwave door, the dark TV screen when the sun hit it just right, would fog up when we were near, and words would appear in the condensation. Not Miriam’s elegant script anymore, but hasty, desperate-looking scrawls, as if the magic itself was getting impatient.
TIME RUNS.
HEARTS BARE.
MOON HUNGRY.
One morning, I came up from the basement to find my mother carefully covering the living room mirror with a bedsheet. It promptly burst into flames, but she just beat out the small blue fire with a couch cushion, her face a mask of grim determination, and tacked up a piece of cardboard instead.
“The town board is meeting tonight.” My father announced over the singing toaster. He didn’t look at us. “About the... ‘ongoing disruption to the educational and community environment.’”
The “ongoing disruption.” That’s what we were. A public nuisance with a heartbeat. Two of them.
The town board emergency meeting was held in the high school auditorium, and it was packed tighter than a Friday night football game. The air hummed with the low buzz of a hundred conversations and the scent of cheap perfume and anxiety. Parents filled the rows, their faces etched with outrage, morbid curiosity, or a weird, proprietary pride as if our cursed nudity was a local attraction they had a stake in.
Lila-Beth and I were given two folding chairs, placed conspicuously alone at the front of the room, facing the stage. We’d been allowed to wear the choir robes again, a temporary, scratchy reprieve that we knew wouldn’t last. We sat so close our chairs touched, the heavy black fabric a thin veil over the constant, humming connection between us. I could feel Lila-Beth’s heart thrumming through the bond of a frantic bird against my own ribs.
Principal Hendricks stood at the podium, a man facing a firing squad. He cleared his throat. The microphone screeched.
“Given the unique ... and unprecedented circumstances.” He began, his voice too loud. “The board has convened to discuss a path forward that ensures both the educational needs of the students in question and the ... decorum ... of our learning environment.”
He spoke in a careful, bureaucratic drone about “remote learning solutions,” “alternative curricula,” and “prudent distance.” He was building a case. Boxing us up and shipping us out. Making us someone else’s problem.
I could feel Tammy Jo’s gaze like a laser on the back of my neck from somewhere in the middle of the crowd. Her satisfaction was a sour tang in the air, a feeling I knew was partly my own perception and partly leaking through the bond from Lila-Beth’s heightened senses.
“Therefore,” Hendricks said, reaching his crescendo. “The board determines that the most equitable solution is for Miss Dawson and Miss McCallister to complete their senior year via an accredited, independent study program, conducted off-campus, effective immediately.”
POP! BZZZZZT! CRACK!
Every single overhead fluorescent light tube in the auditorium exploded at once.
It wasn’t a power surge. It was a violent, simultaneous detonation of glass and sparks. A collective gasp rose from the crowd as the room plunged into near-total darkness, lit only by the red EXIT signs and the slivers of twilight around the doors.
And by us.
Our choir robes, the “barrier,” disintegrated. Not in a flash of fire this time, but in a silent puff of black dust that vanished into the dark. And our glow, no longer muffled by fabric, blazed forth.
In the pitch-black auditorium, we lit up like two human-shaped lanterns. A pulsing, swirling aurora of pink and gold light emanated from our skin, illuminating our two folding chairs, the stunned, pale face of Principal Hendricks, and the first few rows of gaping spectators.
It was utterly silent save for the faint ting of falling glass shards.
Then, from the very back of the room, a familiar, wheezing chuckle cut through the stillness. Old Man Holloway’s voice, rich with vindication, rang out:
“Told ya. Miriam always did hate homeschooling.”
Chaos erupted. Someone screamed. A baby started wailing. Chairs scraped as people stood up, their shadows huge and monstrous against the walls in our unearthly light.
In the pandemonium, Lila-Beth’s hand found mine under the folding chair. Her fingers were ice-cold, but where our skin touched, a new kind of light sparked a sharp, focused arc of pure gold, visible only to us. It was a thread, a tether, a silent conversation.
They wanted to separate us, the bond seemed to scream.
We won’t let them, the golden spark whispered back.
The aftermath was a quiet, domestic surrender.
My parents’ final, desperate attempt at normalcy was what my dad called “Limited Supervised Contact.” It was born from the ashes of their other failed schemes.
The Shower Incident had resulted in both bathrooms flooding with warm, iridescent, champagne-scented bubbles.
The Church Intervention had ended with every Bible spontaneously flipping open to the Song of Solomon.
The Science Fair Debacle had left the gymnasium dripping with enthusiastic, unexplained foam.
So now, “Limited Supervised Contact” meant we were allowed to be in the same room, even touching, as long as one of my parents was present. It was the only way to prevent the magic from “acting out.”
Which is how I found myself perched awkwardly on Lila-Beth’s lap in our living room that evening. It was the only chair that hadn’t mysteriously sprouted sharp springs or developed a sudden, aggressive tilt. The couch was currently levitating three inches off the floor and refused to come down.
“This is humiliating,” I muttered under my breath, my glow flickering a dark crimson. I was hyper-aware of the solid warmth of her thighs under mine, the way her hands rested, hesitant and stiff on my bare hips. It wasn’t an embrace. It was a strategic placement.
“Could be worse,” Lila-Beth whispered back, her breath tickling my ear. “You could be the one with bony knees digging into your thighs.”
My father sighed from his armchair, the nightly ritual of temple-rubbing well underway. “Just ... try to be discreet at school tomorrow. Maybe they’ll have ... recalibrated after the light show.”
My mother, perched on the edge of the floating couch as if it were perfectly normal, made a small, deflating sound. “Our daughter.” She said to the room at large, her voice hollow with acceptance. “Is going to graduate as half of a magical nudist duo.”
No one had anything to say to that. It was, after all, the truth.
But in the quiet that followed, something shifted. The initial stiffness in Lila-Beth’s hands relaxed just a fraction. Her thumbs made an absent, almost unconscious circle on my hip bones. The sensation shot through me a jolt that was entirely separate from the magic’s constant hum. It was just touching. Human touch. And it had been so long since anyone had touched me without fear, or pity, or clinical necessity.
I didn’t pull away.
The bond, ever-sensitive, tuned to this new frequency. The frantic, defensive buzz softened into something warmer, a low thrum that felt less like being wired together and more like ... sharing a blanket. The golden light where our skin met softened from a sharp spark to a gentle, pulsing glow.
My father glanced over, saw us sitting there not fighting, not terrified, just ... existing in the bizarre reality, and something in his own tense posture eased. He picked up his newspaper, a silent white flag.
For the first time since the chair, the house didn’t feel like a warzone. It felt like a very, very weird ceasefire.
Later, in the basement, the space between our cots seemed to shrink. The air didn’t hum with tension, but with a charged, quiet energy. We were both staring at the ceiling.
“Your dad’s not so bad,” Lila-Beth said into the darkness.
“Your aunt was a menace,” I replied.
She laughed at a real one, soft and unguarded. “The worst.”
Then she said, “I keep thinking about what the toast said. ‘Greatest blessing.’ What do you think that means?”
I didn’t answer right away. I thought about the shared nightmare, the involuntary confessions, the way her anger felt like my anger, the way her rare, real laugh felt like sunlight in my veins. I thought about the terrifying, powerful surge in the cafeteria, the protective golden spark in the dark auditorium.
“I think,” I said slowly. “The curse was the chair. The binding ... this.” I gestured between us in the dark, though she couldn’t see it. “Might be something else.”
The bond hummed in agreement with a current of shared understanding that was beyond words.
The final clue came not from toast or mirrors, but from the lounge itself.
We’d avoided it. It sat in a corner of the basement, covered with the same sheet that had later disintegrated on us, a silent monument to the start of it all. But that night, as we tried to sleep, a new sound started.
A low, rhythmic creaking. Like someone was slowly rocking in it.
We both sat up. Our glows brightened, illuminating the room. The sheet had slipped off. The burgundy velvet seemed to drink the light, looking darker, more profound. And it was moving. Gently, steadily rocking back and forth on its own.
As we watched, the fabric on the seat cushion began to shift. Not the dramatic rippling from before, but a gentle, flowing movement as if an invisible hand was stroking it. The deep impression of the face seemed to soften, the lines blurring, until it wasn’t a portrait of trapped agony anymore, but something smoother, calmer.
Then, from the very center of the cushion, a single, perfect edelweiss flower bloomed. It was crafted not from fabric, but from condensed light, a tiny, intricate sculpture of soft white and silver glow. It pulsed once, gently, and then its light dimmed, leaving a perfect, physical white flower on the velvet.
A gift. A peace offering. A symbol of something fragile that grows in impossible places.
Lila-Beth got up and walked over to the chair. She picked up the flower. It was cool and solid in her hand. She didn’t look at me, but I could feel the wave of emotion through the bond, a complex swirl of grief, love, and a dawning, terrifying hope.
“My aunt’s favorite flower.” She whispered.
The message was clear. The chair, the curse, the catalyst ... It was done. It had served its purpose. What happened now was up to us.
The pressure wasn’t just from the town or the countdown to the eclipse. It was inside us. A pressure was building in the space between our twin heartbeats, in the silent conversations of our shared light, in the terrifying, beautiful truth that was becoming impossible to ignore.
We were running out of time to pretend this was just a curse.
The moon was getting closer.
And our hearts, for better or worse, were beating as one.
The Enchanted Lounger
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Danielle
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Chapter 7: Blood Moon Truths
Chapter 7: Blood Moon Truths
The night of the eclipse arrived not with a sense of resolution, but with the atmosphere of a bizarre, small-town festival.
Our “private, mystical ritual” had, through the relentless engine of Cedar Hollow gossip, morphed into a community event. By the time my parents, Holloway, and an incredibly reluctant Principal Hendricks escorted us onto the football field, half the town was already there.
Folding chairs and picnic blankets dotted the track. Concession stands, normally reserved for Friday night games, were doing a brisk business selling “Eclipse Burgers” (just regular burgers with a black bun) and “Blood Moon Punch” (Hawaiian Punch with dry ice swirling in it). Kids ran around with glow sticks, their shrieks cutting through the murmuring crowd. Mr. Jenkins from the gas station had set up his telescope with a sign that read: “SEE THE MOON TURN RED (and maybe the girls turn normal?) $2.”
It was a carnival of our humiliation.
And there, in a prime spot on the 50-yard line, holding court, was Tammy Jo Harkness. She’d upgraded from a betting pool to selling “I Survived the Cedar Hollow Eclipse” t-shirts (poorly screen-printed) and offering “professional commentary” to anyone who would listen. Her gaze, when it found us, was no longer just cruel. It was calculating. We were the main attraction, and she had a front-row seat.
My skin prickled under the weight of hundreds of stares. The October air was crisp, raising goosebumps on my arms and legs. The blood moon hung low and heavy in the clear sky, a swollen, copper-colored orb that cast an eerie, reddish light over everything, making the green turf look black and the white yard lines glow like neon.
“This is worse than the time I forgot my pants for gym class in seventh grade,” Lila-Beth muttered beside me.
Her fingers found mine and laced tightly through them. It wasn’t a romantic gesture. It was an anchor. Our joined hands ignited, glowing like molten gold where our skin met the light so bright it seemed to push back the moon’s ruddy glow, creating a small, private sun between us.
Old Man Holloway, wearing what appeared to be his regular overalls but with a stained satin sash draped across his chest, stepped forward. He held up the charred, water-stained remains of Miriam’s grimoire. The crowd hushed, a wave of silence rolling out from the center of the field.
“Miriam’s instructions were clear.” He announced, his reedy voice carrying in the stillness. He wasn’t shouting; the crowd was just that quiet. “For the final lock to break, you gotta speak your truth under the blood moon. The foundational truth. The one the magic’s been pushin’ you toward since minute one.” He fixed his pale eyes on us. “No holdin’ back. No pretty lies. The magic’ll know.”
My mouth was desert-dry. I could feel Lila-Beth’s pulse racing through her hand, a frantic rhythm that matched my own. The bond was a live wire, vibrating with a tension that was both ours and something more, the magic itself, gathering, waiting.
“What truth?” I managed to croak.
Holloway’s grin was a gash in his bearded face. “The one you’ve been avoidin’. The one that’s got nothin’ to do with chairs or curses or nakedness.”
The crowd seemed to lean in as one single, expectant organism.
Lila-Beth turned to me. In the bloody moonlight, her face was all shadows and sharp angles, her hazel eyes reflecting the coppery disc above. Our shared glow pulsed in time with our synchronized heartbeat, a visual metronome counting down.
“I think.” She whispered, her voice so low only I could hear it over the wind. “I think I know what it wants.”
The certainty in her words resonated in the hollow of my own chest. The dreams, the confessions, the unbearable closeness, the way her anger felt like my anger, her rare laugh felt like sunshine in my veins.
“Yeah.” I heard myself say, my voice just as quiet, just as sure. “Me too.”
She squeezed my hand once, then let go, stepping a half-pace forward to face the moon, the crowd, the impossible moment. She took a shaky breath that hitched in her throat.
Then she spoke, her voice clear and loud, ringing out over the silent field.
“I hated you.”
The words landed like a physical blow. A ripple of shocked murmurs went through the crowd.
She turned her head to look at me, her eyes blazing with a truth she’d been carrying for over a year. “Before any of this. Last year. In algebra. You sat behind me, and you kicked my chair. Every. Single. Day. Just a little tap with your stupid boot. And it drove me insane.”
My own surprise was a jolt of static in the bond. “What? You started it! You kept turning around to ‘borrow a pencil’ or ‘ask for the time,’ and you’d always make some snide comment about my band shirt! You called my Misfits tee ‘try-hard’!”
“Because you were!” Lila-Beth shot back, her glow flaring a brilliant, furious pink. The magic thrummed, pulling the emotion from her, amplifying it. “You were always so ... so cool without even trying! Sitting back there, all quiet and scowling, like you were above it all! And your stupid hair always smelled like vanilla from that cheap shampoo, and it distracted me during quizzes! I’d got a formula wrong because I was trying to figure out what the scent was!”
A collective gasp, then a louder murmur, swept through the spectators. This wasn’t a cursed confession. This was a teenage grievance, raw and real, stripped of magic and laid bare under the moon.
The dam broke inside me. All the petty, coiled-up feelings from a year of sitting behind Lila-Beth McCallister, the irritation, the fascination, the sheer, unacknowledged awareness of her surged up, given voice by the moon and the magic.
“I kicked your chair,” I yelled, my voice cracking. “Because your laugh made my stomach do backflips, you idiot! You’d get an answer right, and you’d do this little ... this little snort-laugh, and it was the only thing in that whole godforsaken class that felt real! And it messed me up! I couldn’t concentrate! I was too busy being mad about it!”
The second the words left my mouth, the truth I hadn’t even admitted to myself, the world changed.
The blood moon’s light didn’t just brighten; it poured down a focused beam of crimson energy that enveloped us completely. The golden light from our joined hands erupted, shooting up our arms, meeting the red in a dazzling collision. Our hands began to burn not with pain, but with a heat so intense, so pure, it felt like creation.
The air between us shimmered, and then she was there.
Miriam’s ghost materialized in a swirl of lavender-scented mist and glittering, moon-dust motes. She was translucent, dressed in a flowing gown that might have been a nightgown, her wild hair crackling with static energy. She wore a grin of immense, unadulterated satisfaction.
“Finally.” She sighed, her voice an echo from a great distance, yet clear as a bell. “Took you long enough. I was starting to think I’d overdone the chair a bit.”
Lila-Beth yelped, jumping back but unable to break our joined, blazing hands. “Aunt Miriam?!”
“The curse.” The ghost said, floating a lazy circle around us. “Was never a punishment, you beautiful dummies.” She gestured to our glowing, intertwined forms. “It was a gift. A crowbar for your stubborn, teenage hearts. A way to force you past all that angst and posturing and see what was sitting right in front of you all along.” Her spectral eyes, the same hazel as Lila-Beth’s, twinkled. “The magic didn’t create this connection. It just ripped away everything that was hiding it.”
The realization hit me like a physical blow. The hatred, the irritation, the distraction ... They were just noise. Static on the line. Underneath it, the connection had always been there, humming quietly, waiting.
Miriam’s form grew more serious as the moon above reached totality, y becoming a perfect, dark disc rimmed with fiery red. “Now comes the choice. The eclipse holds the power. It can break the curse ... sever the bond completely, leave you two as you were. Alone. Separate. Normal.” She smiled at a mischievous, loving thing. “Or ... it can make it permanent. A choice, not a sentence. Your hearts have to decide. Together.”
She looked from Lila-Beth to me, her expression softening. “What do you want?”
The noise of the crowd, the cold, the staring eyes, it all faded away. There was only the roaring in my ears, the unbearable heat in our joined hands, and Lila-Beth’s face, turned to me, etched in blood and gold.
I saw the fear there. The hope. The same terrifying, thrilling question that was screaming in my own soul.
Lila-Beth opened her mouth. “I’m tired of pretending I don’t.”
I didn’t let her finish.
I kissed her.
It wasn’t gentle. It was a collision. An answer. A truth spoken in a language deeper than words, older than magic. It was the final barrier dissolving.
Her lips were soft, and she was kissing me back with a desperate, shaky intensity that made my knees forget how to work. The world dissolved into pure, blinding, golden light. The heat from our hands consumed us, but it didn’t burn. It merged.
When the light receded, drinking itself back into our skin, and we were still kissing, clinging to each other in the sudden, ordinary dimness of the football field. The blood moon shone normally overhead, just a moon again.
We broke apart, gasping.
I looked down.
We were clothed.
Soft, faded jeans. Matching black t-shirts. Mine had a stylized golden sun over my heart. Hers had a silver crescent moon. They fit perfectly. The fabric was real, solid, and normal against my skin.
Our visible glow was gone. But on my right wrist, a mark pulsed with a soft, warm light, a swirling, artistic sun etched in living gold. On Lila-Beth’s skin, over her heart where her shirt dipped, I could see the corresponding silver glow of a crescent moon.
The bond wasn’t broken. It was translated. Chosen. Permanent.
Ours.
From the edge of the field, Principal Hendricks timidly approached, wringing his hands. He looked from our fully clothed forms to the now-disappointed crowd (the show was clearly over), to the normal moon.
“So ... does this mean you’ll be wearing, ah, normal clothes to graduation?”
Lila-Beth looked at me. A slow, dazzling grin spread across her face, a grin I’d never seen before, free of fear or desperation. It was pure, triumphant joy.
She reached out and laced her fingers with mine. Where our skin touched, our marks flared brighter for a second, a silent, golden-silver conversation.
“No promises.” We said in unison, and then laughed at the sound bubbling up free and clear in the cool night air.
The curse was over.
The blessing had begun.
The night of the eclipse arrived not with a sense of resolution, but with the atmosphere of a bizarre, small-town festival.
Our “private, mystical ritual” had, through the relentless engine of Cedar Hollow gossip, morphed into a community event. By the time my parents, Holloway, and an incredibly reluctant Principal Hendricks escorted us onto the football field, half the town was already there.
Folding chairs and picnic blankets dotted the track. Concession stands, normally reserved for Friday night games, were doing a brisk business selling “Eclipse Burgers” (just regular burgers with a black bun) and “Blood Moon Punch” (Hawaiian Punch with dry ice swirling in it). Kids ran around with glow sticks, their shrieks cutting through the murmuring crowd. Mr. Jenkins from the gas station had set up his telescope with a sign that read: “SEE THE MOON TURN RED (and maybe the girls turn normal?) $2.”
It was a carnival of our humiliation.
And there, in a prime spot on the 50-yard line, holding court, was Tammy Jo Harkness. She’d upgraded from a betting pool to selling “I Survived the Cedar Hollow Eclipse” t-shirts (poorly screen-printed) and offering “professional commentary” to anyone who would listen. Her gaze, when it found us, was no longer just cruel. It was calculating. We were the main attraction, and she had a front-row seat.
My skin prickled under the weight of hundreds of stares. The October air was crisp, raising goosebumps on my arms and legs. The blood moon hung low and heavy in the clear sky, a swollen, copper-colored orb that cast an eerie, reddish light over everything, making the green turf look black and the white yard lines glow like neon.
“This is worse than the time I forgot my pants for gym class in seventh grade,” Lila-Beth muttered beside me.
Her fingers found mine and laced tightly through them. It wasn’t a romantic gesture. It was an anchor. Our joined hands ignited, glowing like molten gold where our skin met the light so bright it seemed to push back the moon’s ruddy glow, creating a small, private sun between us.
Old Man Holloway, wearing what appeared to be his regular overalls but with a stained satin sash draped across his chest, stepped forward. He held up the charred, water-stained remains of Miriam’s grimoire. The crowd hushed, a wave of silence rolling out from the center of the field.
“Miriam’s instructions were clear.” He announced, his reedy voice carrying in the stillness. He wasn’t shouting; the crowd was just that quiet. “For the final lock to break, you gotta speak your truth under the blood moon. The foundational truth. The one the magic’s been pushin’ you toward since minute one.” He fixed his pale eyes on us. “No holdin’ back. No pretty lies. The magic’ll know.”
My mouth was desert-dry. I could feel Lila-Beth’s pulse racing through her hand, a frantic rhythm that matched my own. The bond was a live wire, vibrating with a tension that was both ours and something more, the magic itself, gathering, waiting.
“What truth?” I managed to croak.
Holloway’s grin was a gash in his bearded face. “The one you’ve been avoidin’. The one that’s got nothin’ to do with chairs or curses or nakedness.”
The crowd seemed to lean in as one single, expectant organism.
Lila-Beth turned to me. In the bloody moonlight, her face was all shadows and sharp angles, her hazel eyes reflecting the coppery disc above. Our shared glow pulsed in time with our synchronized heartbeat, a visual metronome counting down.
“I think.” She whispered, her voice so low only I could hear it over the wind. “I think I know what it wants.”
The certainty in her words resonated in the hollow of my own chest. The dreams, the confessions, the unbearable closeness, the way her anger felt like my anger, her rare laugh felt like sunshine in my veins.
“Yeah.” I heard myself say, my voice just as quiet, just as sure. “Me too.”
She squeezed my hand once, then let go, stepping a half-pace forward to face the moon, the crowd, the impossible moment. She took a shaky breath that hitched in her throat.
Then she spoke, her voice clear and loud, ringing out over the silent field.
“I hated you.”
The words landed like a physical blow. A ripple of shocked murmurs went through the crowd.
She turned her head to look at me, her eyes blazing with a truth she’d been carrying for over a year. “Before any of this. Last year. In algebra. You sat behind me, and you kicked my chair. Every. Single. Day. Just a little tap with your stupid boot. And it drove me insane.”
My own surprise was a jolt of static in the bond. “What? You started it! You kept turning around to ‘borrow a pencil’ or ‘ask for the time,’ and you’d always make some snide comment about my band shirt! You called my Misfits tee ‘try-hard’!”
“Because you were!” Lila-Beth shot back, her glow flaring a brilliant, furious pink. The magic thrummed, pulling the emotion from her, amplifying it. “You were always so ... so cool without even trying! Sitting back there, all quiet and scowling, like you were above it all! And your stupid hair always smelled like vanilla from that cheap shampoo, and it distracted me during quizzes! I’d got a formula wrong because I was trying to figure out what the scent was!”
A collective gasp, then a louder murmur, swept through the spectators. This wasn’t a cursed confession. This was a teenage grievance, raw and real, stripped of magic and laid bare under the moon.
The dam broke inside me. All the petty, coiled-up feelings from a year of sitting behind Lila-Beth McCallister, the irritation, the fascination, the sheer, unacknowledged awareness of her surged up, given voice by the moon and the magic.
“I kicked your chair,” I yelled, my voice cracking. “Because your laugh made my stomach do backflips, you idiot! You’d get an answer right, and you’d do this little ... this little snort-laugh, and it was the only thing in that whole godforsaken class that felt real! And it messed me up! I couldn’t concentrate! I was too busy being mad about it!”
The second the words left my mouth, the truth I hadn’t even admitted to myself, the world changed.
The blood moon’s light didn’t just brighten; it poured down a focused beam of crimson energy that enveloped us completely. The golden light from our joined hands erupted, shooting up our arms, meeting the red in a dazzling collision. Our hands began to burn not with pain, but with a heat so intense, so pure, it felt like creation.
The air between us shimmered, and then she was there.
Miriam’s ghost materialized in a swirl of lavender-scented mist and glittering, moon-dust motes. She was translucent, dressed in a flowing gown that might have been a nightgown, her wild hair crackling with static energy. She wore a grin of immense, unadulterated satisfaction.
“Finally.” She sighed, her voice an echo from a great distance, yet clear as a bell. “Took you long enough. I was starting to think I’d overdone the chair a bit.”
Lila-Beth yelped, jumping back but unable to break our joined, blazing hands. “Aunt Miriam?!”
“The curse.” The ghost said, floating a lazy circle around us. “Was never a punishment, you beautiful dummies.” She gestured to our glowing, intertwined forms. “It was a gift. A crowbar for your stubborn, teenage hearts. A way to force you past all that angst and posturing and see what was sitting right in front of you all along.” Her spectral eyes, the same hazel as Lila-Beth’s, twinkled. “The magic didn’t create this connection. It just ripped away everything that was hiding it.”
The realization hit me like a physical blow. The hatred, the irritation, the distraction ... They were just noise. Static on the line. Underneath it, the connection had always been there, humming quietly, waiting.
Miriam’s form grew more serious as the moon above reached totality, y becoming a perfect, dark disc rimmed with fiery red. “Now comes the choice. The eclipse holds the power. It can break the curse ... sever the bond completely, leave you two as you were. Alone. Separate. Normal.” She smiled at a mischievous, loving thing. “Or ... it can make it permanent. A choice, not a sentence. Your hearts have to decide. Together.”
She looked from Lila-Beth to me, her expression softening. “What do you want?”
The noise of the crowd, the cold, the staring eyes, it all faded away. There was only the roaring in my ears, the unbearable heat in our joined hands, and Lila-Beth’s face, turned to me, etched in blood and gold.
I saw the fear there. The hope. The same terrifying, thrilling question that was screaming in my own soul.
Lila-Beth opened her mouth. “I’m tired of pretending I don’t.”
I didn’t let her finish.
I kissed her.
It wasn’t gentle. It was a collision. An answer. A truth spoken in a language deeper than words, older than magic. It was the final barrier dissolving.
Her lips were soft, and she was kissing me back with a desperate, shaky intensity that made my knees forget how to work. The world dissolved into pure, blinding, golden light. The heat from our hands consumed us, but it didn’t burn. It merged.
When the light receded, drinking itself back into our skin, and we were still kissing, clinging to each other in the sudden, ordinary dimness of the football field. The blood moon shone normally overhead, just a moon again.
We broke apart, gasping.
I looked down.
We were clothed.
Soft, faded jeans. Matching black t-shirts. Mine had a stylized golden sun over my heart. Hers had a silver crescent moon. They fit perfectly. The fabric was real, solid, and normal against my skin.
Our visible glow was gone. But on my right wrist, a mark pulsed with a soft, warm light, a swirling, artistic sun etched in living gold. On Lila-Beth’s skin, over her heart where her shirt dipped, I could see the corresponding silver glow of a crescent moon.
The bond wasn’t broken. It was translated. Chosen. Permanent.
Ours.
From the edge of the field, Principal Hendricks timidly approached, wringing his hands. He looked from our fully clothed forms to the now-disappointed crowd (the show was clearly over), to the normal moon.
“So ... does this mean you’ll be wearing, ah, normal clothes to graduation?”
Lila-Beth looked at me. A slow, dazzling grin spread across her face, a grin I’d never seen before, free of fear or desperation. It was pure, triumphant joy.
She reached out and laced her fingers with mine. Where our skin touched, our marks flared brighter for a second, a silent, golden-silver conversation.
“No promises.” We said in unison, and then laughed at the sound bubbling up free and clear in the cool night air.
The curse was over.
The blessing had begun.
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Danielle
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Chapter 8: The Blessing
Chapter 8: The Blessing
The world came back into focus not with a bang, but with a sigh, the collective release of a town whose favorite freak show had just packed up and left. The golden light had been absorbed into our skin, into the marks now etched there, leaving the football field under the mundane glow of a normal moon and the harsh, buzzing fluorescence of the security lights clicking back on.
We were clothed. The sensation was so alien, so profoundly normal, it was almost shocking. The soft cotton of the t-shirt against my skin, the rough denim of the jeans barriers I’d been denied for weeks now felt like luxurious armor. But they weren’t hiding me. They were marking me. The golden sun over my heart was warm, a gentle, constant pulse against my sternum.
Lila-Beth stood beside me, her fingers still laced with mine. Her silver moon glowed through the fabric of her shirt. Our connection hadn’t vanished; it had condensed, refined. The frantic, overwhelming merger was gone. In its place was a deep, resonant hum, a private frequency only we could hear. I could still feelther echo of her awe, the solid reality of her hand in mine, but it was no longer an invasion. It was a choice. A presence.
Principal Hendricks’s question hung in the ai,r absurd and small. The crowd was already dispersing, grumbling about the anti-climax, packing up their eclipse-themed snacks. Tammy Jo stood frozen by her unsold t-shirt table, her mouth a perfect, stunned ‘O’. Her power, her curated spectacle, had evaporated. We weren’t her naked, glowing prisoners anymore. We were just ... us. And we were together in a way that made her petty cruelty look like dust.
Holloway ambled up, his ceremonial sash looking even more ridiculous under the stadium lights. He grunted, looking from my sun to Lila-Beth’s moon. “Told ya she was a romantic.” He didn’t smile, but his eyes crinkled at the corners. “The chair’s yours now. Reckon it’ll want to stay with you. Sentimental, like.”
He turned and shuffled away, melting into the departing crowd without another word. His work was done.
My parents approached, moving slowly, cautiously, as if we might still be volatile. My mother’s eyes were red-rimmed but dry, fixed on the golden symbol on my shirt. My father just looked at our joined hands, then at my face, and his own expression shifted from wary confusion to something softer, more resigned.
He gave a single, slow nod. An acceptance. A blessing of his own.
The days that followed were a quiet revolution.
The visible magic was gone from Cedar Hollow. The gossip mill, deprived of its juiciest fuel, sputtered and turned to other topics: a scandal at the rotary club, a mysterious fungus on the old oak in the town square.
We were just two girls who were ... very close. The marks on our skin were dismissed as trendy tattoos by those who didn’t know, and as a private, permanent reminder by those who did. The “love throne” desk was quietly removed from the classrooms. Ms. Fennel stopped ordering glow-in-the-dark paint.
But underneath the surface, everything was different.
The bond had rules now, a grammar we learned by living.
Shared senses were controlled, like a dial we could turn. I could, if I focused, taste the mint of Lila-Beth’s toothpaste in the morning. She’d complain about the bitter aftertaste of my coffee. We learned to mute it during tests, to amplify it when we wanted to share a beautiful sunset or a song we loved.
Emotional echoes were the trickiest. When Lila-Beth got nervous before a big art critique, our entire dorm room would subtly smell like lavender, her calming scent. When I was deep into writing a paper, she’d get restless, buzzing with my focused energy. We’d have to learn to recognize the spillover, to say, “Hey, dial down the anxiety, it’s leaking,” or “Your concentration is making me twitchy.”
And then there was The Other Perk.
The discovery was made during winter break of our first year of college, in the small apartment we shared. The forced proximity was gone, but the bond remained, humming with new, unexplored potential. We learned certain things ... intimate sensations didn’t just echo; they amplified ricocheting back and forth across the connection in a feedback loop of breathtaking, soul-rending intensity.
It made our first time together less about two people and more about a single, shared wave of feeling cresting and breaking. We’d emerged hours later, shaky, laughing, wordless, and utterly, irrevocably fused in a new way. My parents were very, very glad we had separate rooms when we visited.
The enchanted lounger resided in our apartment, a proud, regal centerpiece that purred when we sat on it together and steadfastly refused anyone else’s weight. It was ours. A testament. Sometimes, we’d find fresh edelweiss flowers, real ones now tucked into its seams, or a note in Miriam’s looping script on the pillow: Knew you’d figure it out. – M
We navigated college, friendships, and family. The bond wasn’t a burden anymore; it was our foundation. Our compass. When we argued, my mark would tingle with her frustration until I really listened and vice versa. It was impossible to stay angry when you could literally feel the shape of the other’s hurt. It forced empathy. It forced resolution.
Five Years Later.
The burgundy lounger sat in a sunbeam in the living room of our little house on the edge of town,wn not far from where Miriam’s had once stood. The afternoon light caught the velvet, making it look like a pool of dark wine.
I was trying to read, but the words wouldn’t stick. A familiar, distracting sensation was blooming at the base of my skull, a fizzy, creative restlessness that wasn’t mine.
I looked over at Lila-Beth. She was at her easel by the window, her back to me, completely still except for the furious, graceful motion of her wrist. She was in the zone. The bond thrummed with her concentration, a low, potent buzz that felt like a hive of creative bees in my veins.
“You’re projecting,” I said, my voice cutting through the quiet.
She didn’t turn. “Am not. You’re just avoiding your book.”
“The top of my head is tingling with your ... your artistic fervor. It’s very loud.”
A small smile touched her voice. “Good. Maybe it’ll inspire you to read something less boring.”
I threw a couch pillow at her. It bounced off her shoulder. Her moon-mark, visible where her tank top strap had slipped,d glowed once, a flash of silver amusement.
This was our normal. The bond was the weather in the room we both lived in.
From the corner, a soft, rhythmic creaking began. The lounge was rocking gently, all on its own. On its cushion, where Lila-Beth’s face had once been permanently pressed, a new impression was forming. Not of anguish, but of peaceful repose. And cradled within that impression, wrapped in a blanket spun from sunbeam and shadow, was a tiny, sleeping form.
Our daughter, Elara, is six months old. The chair was her favorite nap spot. It purred the loudest for her.
I got up and walked over to the easel. Lila-Beth was painting over an old canvas, as layers of color created a textured, stormy background. In the center, taking shape, were two figures. Not fused. Not glowing. Just two distinct forms standing close, their hands linked. Between them, held in their joined hands, was a small, radiant light. The lines were confident, sure. It was us, but not as the world saw us during the curse. As we were now. Separate, together. A family.
I rested my chin on her shoulder, watching her mix a color, a specific, deep gold, the exact shade of my mark. The fizzy restlessness in my head softened, melding with a deep, quiet wave of love and contentment coming from her.
“I like it,” I whispered.
“It’s not done.”
“I still like it.”
She leaned her head back against mine. Our marks, where her neck met my cheek, warmed in tandem. No flare, just a gentle, sustained heat, like stones holding the sun’s memory.
Down in the street, Cedar Hollow went about its business. The town had absorbed our story, filed it away under “Local Oddities,” and moved on. We were no longer the glowing girls. We were just “the Dawson-McCallisters”, the couple in the craftsman house with the weirdly comfortable-looking chair and the beautiful, quiet baby.
The epic was over. The quiet, extraordinary business of living had begun.
I thought about the choice under the blood moon. To break the curse or make it a blessing. We’d chosen the blessing. But a blessing isn’t a static thing. It’s a verb. It’s the act of choosing each other, again and again, in a thousand mundane moments. Choosing to feel her joy as my own. Choosing to shoulder the edge of her sadness. Choosing to let this strange, enchanted thread between us be the thing that ties us to the earth, not the thing that holds us back from it.
Lila-Beth put her brush down and turned in my arms. She had a smudge of cobalt blue on her cheek. Her hazel eyes, clear and sure,e met mine. No magic needed to tell me what she was feeling. It was written in the relaxed set of her mouth, in the way her hands came to rest on my hips, in the steady, loving pulse of the silver moon over her heart.
“The book isn’t going to read itself.” She said, id but she wasn’t moving.
“The painting isn’t going to paint itself.” I countered.
We stood there for a long moment, in a pool of sunlight and shared quiet. The bond hummed its constant, quiet note. Not a spell. Not a curse. A conversation. An understanding. A story we were still writing one ordinary, miraculous day at a time.
From her cushion on the enchanted lounger, Elara made a soft, sleepy sound. A single, perfect edelweiss flower with its petals the color of moonlight bloomed silently on the armrest beside her.
“Later.” We both said at once, and laughed.
And in the corner, the enchanted lounger gave a soft, deep, contented purr.
THE END
Epilogue: The Fine Print
The email arrived on a Tuesday, three years after the eclipse.
Lila-Beth read it aloud over breakfast, her voice caught between amusement and exasperation. Elara, now three and obsessed with the chair, was busy feeding it pieces of her toast, which the velvet somehow absorbed without leaving a crumb.
Dear Ms. Dawson and Ms. McCallister,
On behalf of the Paranormal Acquisitions Department of the Smithsonian Institution, we would like to inquire about the possibility of acquiring.
Lila-Beth stopped reading. “They want to buy the chair.”
“Absolutely not,” I said, without looking up from my coffee.
“That’s what I thought.” She scrolled further. “They’re offering a lot of money.”
“Absolutely not.”
“They mention ‘national historical significance’ and ‘unique magical artifact preservation.’”
“Lila-Beth.”
She grinned at me over her phone that same grin from the football field, years ago, free and fierce and full of joy. “I’m just saying, we could finally fix the porch.”
“The porch is fine.”
“The porch is listing. Like the Tower of Pisa, but with more termites.”
I glanced at the lounge at Elara, patting its armrest, at the fresh edelweiss bloom that had appeared overnight tucked behind her ear, at the soft, rhythmic purr that vibrated through the floorboards. It had been with us through everything. Through college, through our first apartment, through the move back to Cedar Hollow when my parents needed help, through Elara’s birth when it had glowed so brightly the entire delivery room had gasped, and then settled into a warm, steady pulse that matched my contractions.
It was part of us now. Part of her.
“We’re not sellin',” I said.
“I know.” Lila-Beth put her phone down and reached across the table, her fingers finding mine. Our marks flared gently in greeting old friends, saying hello. “I just like hearing you say it.”
From the lounge, Elara giggled. The chair had produced another flower, this one a tiny, perfect rose, and was presenting it to her on the armrest like a gift.
“She gets that from you., I said.
“Get what?”
“The ability to charm inanimate objects into doing her bidding.”
Lila-Beth laughed that same snort-laugh from algebra class, the one that had made my stomach do backflips before I even understood why. “She gets everything from you. The stubbornness. The dramatic eye-rolls. The way she refuses to eat anything green.”
“She eats peas.”
“Under duress. And only if the chair purrs at them first.”
I couldn’t argue with that.
The morning sun continued its slow arc across the kitchen. Elara babbled at the lounger, which responded with soft creaks and the occasional glowing pulse. Lila-Beth’s knee pressed against mine under the table, a casual, unconscious intimacy that still made my heart skip, even after all these years.
My phone buzzed. Another email, this one from Holloway, who had somehow discovered texting at age eighty-seven and now sent daily updates about the shop, usually accompanied by blurry photos of cats he’d befriended.
Chair behaving? It read. Tell it I said hello. Got another one of Miriam’s journals turning up. More fine print. You two might want to see it.
I showed Lila-Beth. She raised an eyebrow.
“More fine print?”
“Apparently.”
“After everything? After the curse, the binding, the blood moon, everything there’s more?”
“That’s what he says.”
She stared at me for a long moment. Then she laughed that same laugh, still the most real thing in any room.
“Well.” She squeezed my hand. “At least we’re in it together.”
The lounge purred its agreement. Elara clapped her hands. Somewhere in Cedar Hollow, another chapter was beginning, one we hadn’t chosen, hadn’t expected, and wouldn’t face alone.
The fine print could wait.
Right now, we had toast to finish, a three-year-old to wrangle, and a lifetime of ordinary miracles ahead.
(until Miriam’s next surprise)
Author’s Note: The enchanted lounge currently resides at 42 Maple Street, Cedar Hollow, where it continues to produce edelweiss flowers, refuse all other sitters, and purr loudly during thunderstorms. Visitors are welcome by appointment only. Please do not sit down.
The End
The world came back into focus not with a bang, but with a sigh, the collective release of a town whose favorite freak show had just packed up and left. The golden light had been absorbed into our skin, into the marks now etched there, leaving the football field under the mundane glow of a normal moon and the harsh, buzzing fluorescence of the security lights clicking back on.
We were clothed. The sensation was so alien, so profoundly normal, it was almost shocking. The soft cotton of the t-shirt against my skin, the rough denim of the jeans barriers I’d been denied for weeks now felt like luxurious armor. But they weren’t hiding me. They were marking me. The golden sun over my heart was warm, a gentle, constant pulse against my sternum.
Lila-Beth stood beside me, her fingers still laced with mine. Her silver moon glowed through the fabric of her shirt. Our connection hadn’t vanished; it had condensed, refined. The frantic, overwhelming merger was gone. In its place was a deep, resonant hum, a private frequency only we could hear. I could still feelther echo of her awe, the solid reality of her hand in mine, but it was no longer an invasion. It was a choice. A presence.
Principal Hendricks’s question hung in the ai,r absurd and small. The crowd was already dispersing, grumbling about the anti-climax, packing up their eclipse-themed snacks. Tammy Jo stood frozen by her unsold t-shirt table, her mouth a perfect, stunned ‘O’. Her power, her curated spectacle, had evaporated. We weren’t her naked, glowing prisoners anymore. We were just ... us. And we were together in a way that made her petty cruelty look like dust.
Holloway ambled up, his ceremonial sash looking even more ridiculous under the stadium lights. He grunted, looking from my sun to Lila-Beth’s moon. “Told ya she was a romantic.” He didn’t smile, but his eyes crinkled at the corners. “The chair’s yours now. Reckon it’ll want to stay with you. Sentimental, like.”
He turned and shuffled away, melting into the departing crowd without another word. His work was done.
My parents approached, moving slowly, cautiously, as if we might still be volatile. My mother’s eyes were red-rimmed but dry, fixed on the golden symbol on my shirt. My father just looked at our joined hands, then at my face, and his own expression shifted from wary confusion to something softer, more resigned.
He gave a single, slow nod. An acceptance. A blessing of his own.
The days that followed were a quiet revolution.
The visible magic was gone from Cedar Hollow. The gossip mill, deprived of its juiciest fuel, sputtered and turned to other topics: a scandal at the rotary club, a mysterious fungus on the old oak in the town square.
We were just two girls who were ... very close. The marks on our skin were dismissed as trendy tattoos by those who didn’t know, and as a private, permanent reminder by those who did. The “love throne” desk was quietly removed from the classrooms. Ms. Fennel stopped ordering glow-in-the-dark paint.
But underneath the surface, everything was different.
The bond had rules now, a grammar we learned by living.
Shared senses were controlled, like a dial we could turn. I could, if I focused, taste the mint of Lila-Beth’s toothpaste in the morning. She’d complain about the bitter aftertaste of my coffee. We learned to mute it during tests, to amplify it when we wanted to share a beautiful sunset or a song we loved.
Emotional echoes were the trickiest. When Lila-Beth got nervous before a big art critique, our entire dorm room would subtly smell like lavender, her calming scent. When I was deep into writing a paper, she’d get restless, buzzing with my focused energy. We’d have to learn to recognize the spillover, to say, “Hey, dial down the anxiety, it’s leaking,” or “Your concentration is making me twitchy.”
And then there was The Other Perk.
The discovery was made during winter break of our first year of college, in the small apartment we shared. The forced proximity was gone, but the bond remained, humming with new, unexplored potential. We learned certain things ... intimate sensations didn’t just echo; they amplified ricocheting back and forth across the connection in a feedback loop of breathtaking, soul-rending intensity.
It made our first time together less about two people and more about a single, shared wave of feeling cresting and breaking. We’d emerged hours later, shaky, laughing, wordless, and utterly, irrevocably fused in a new way. My parents were very, very glad we had separate rooms when we visited.
The enchanted lounger resided in our apartment, a proud, regal centerpiece that purred when we sat on it together and steadfastly refused anyone else’s weight. It was ours. A testament. Sometimes, we’d find fresh edelweiss flowers, real ones now tucked into its seams, or a note in Miriam’s looping script on the pillow: Knew you’d figure it out. – M
We navigated college, friendships, and family. The bond wasn’t a burden anymore; it was our foundation. Our compass. When we argued, my mark would tingle with her frustration until I really listened and vice versa. It was impossible to stay angry when you could literally feel the shape of the other’s hurt. It forced empathy. It forced resolution.
Five Years Later.
The burgundy lounger sat in a sunbeam in the living room of our little house on the edge of town,wn not far from where Miriam’s had once stood. The afternoon light caught the velvet, making it look like a pool of dark wine.
I was trying to read, but the words wouldn’t stick. A familiar, distracting sensation was blooming at the base of my skull, a fizzy, creative restlessness that wasn’t mine.
I looked over at Lila-Beth. She was at her easel by the window, her back to me, completely still except for the furious, graceful motion of her wrist. She was in the zone. The bond thrummed with her concentration, a low, potent buzz that felt like a hive of creative bees in my veins.
“You’re projecting,” I said, my voice cutting through the quiet.
She didn’t turn. “Am not. You’re just avoiding your book.”
“The top of my head is tingling with your ... your artistic fervor. It’s very loud.”
A small smile touched her voice. “Good. Maybe it’ll inspire you to read something less boring.”
I threw a couch pillow at her. It bounced off her shoulder. Her moon-mark, visible where her tank top strap had slipped,d glowed once, a flash of silver amusement.
This was our normal. The bond was the weather in the room we both lived in.
From the corner, a soft, rhythmic creaking began. The lounge was rocking gently, all on its own. On its cushion, where Lila-Beth’s face had once been permanently pressed, a new impression was forming. Not of anguish, but of peaceful repose. And cradled within that impression, wrapped in a blanket spun from sunbeam and shadow, was a tiny, sleeping form.
Our daughter, Elara, is six months old. The chair was her favorite nap spot. It purred the loudest for her.
I got up and walked over to the easel. Lila-Beth was painting over an old canvas, as layers of color created a textured, stormy background. In the center, taking shape, were two figures. Not fused. Not glowing. Just two distinct forms standing close, their hands linked. Between them, held in their joined hands, was a small, radiant light. The lines were confident, sure. It was us, but not as the world saw us during the curse. As we were now. Separate, together. A family.
I rested my chin on her shoulder, watching her mix a color, a specific, deep gold, the exact shade of my mark. The fizzy restlessness in my head softened, melding with a deep, quiet wave of love and contentment coming from her.
“I like it,” I whispered.
“It’s not done.”
“I still like it.”
She leaned her head back against mine. Our marks, where her neck met my cheek, warmed in tandem. No flare, just a gentle, sustained heat, like stones holding the sun’s memory.
Down in the street, Cedar Hollow went about its business. The town had absorbed our story, filed it away under “Local Oddities,” and moved on. We were no longer the glowing girls. We were just “the Dawson-McCallisters”, the couple in the craftsman house with the weirdly comfortable-looking chair and the beautiful, quiet baby.
The epic was over. The quiet, extraordinary business of living had begun.
I thought about the choice under the blood moon. To break the curse or make it a blessing. We’d chosen the blessing. But a blessing isn’t a static thing. It’s a verb. It’s the act of choosing each other, again and again, in a thousand mundane moments. Choosing to feel her joy as my own. Choosing to shoulder the edge of her sadness. Choosing to let this strange, enchanted thread between us be the thing that ties us to the earth, not the thing that holds us back from it.
Lila-Beth put her brush down and turned in my arms. She had a smudge of cobalt blue on her cheek. Her hazel eyes, clear and sure,e met mine. No magic needed to tell me what she was feeling. It was written in the relaxed set of her mouth, in the way her hands came to rest on my hips, in the steady, loving pulse of the silver moon over her heart.
“The book isn’t going to read itself.” She said, id but she wasn’t moving.
“The painting isn’t going to paint itself.” I countered.
We stood there for a long moment, in a pool of sunlight and shared quiet. The bond hummed its constant, quiet note. Not a spell. Not a curse. A conversation. An understanding. A story we were still writing one ordinary, miraculous day at a time.
From her cushion on the enchanted lounger, Elara made a soft, sleepy sound. A single, perfect edelweiss flower with its petals the color of moonlight bloomed silently on the armrest beside her.
“Later.” We both said at once, and laughed.
And in the corner, the enchanted lounger gave a soft, deep, contented purr.
THE END
Epilogue: The Fine Print
The email arrived on a Tuesday, three years after the eclipse.
Lila-Beth read it aloud over breakfast, her voice caught between amusement and exasperation. Elara, now three and obsessed with the chair, was busy feeding it pieces of her toast, which the velvet somehow absorbed without leaving a crumb.
Dear Ms. Dawson and Ms. McCallister,
On behalf of the Paranormal Acquisitions Department of the Smithsonian Institution, we would like to inquire about the possibility of acquiring.
Lila-Beth stopped reading. “They want to buy the chair.”
“Absolutely not,” I said, without looking up from my coffee.
“That’s what I thought.” She scrolled further. “They’re offering a lot of money.”
“Absolutely not.”
“They mention ‘national historical significance’ and ‘unique magical artifact preservation.’”
“Lila-Beth.”
She grinned at me over her phone that same grin from the football field, years ago, free and fierce and full of joy. “I’m just saying, we could finally fix the porch.”
“The porch is fine.”
“The porch is listing. Like the Tower of Pisa, but with more termites.”
I glanced at the lounge at Elara, patting its armrest, at the fresh edelweiss bloom that had appeared overnight tucked behind her ear, at the soft, rhythmic purr that vibrated through the floorboards. It had been with us through everything. Through college, through our first apartment, through the move back to Cedar Hollow when my parents needed help, through Elara’s birth when it had glowed so brightly the entire delivery room had gasped, and then settled into a warm, steady pulse that matched my contractions.
It was part of us now. Part of her.
“We’re not sellin',” I said.
“I know.” Lila-Beth put her phone down and reached across the table, her fingers finding mine. Our marks flared gently in greeting old friends, saying hello. “I just like hearing you say it.”
From the lounge, Elara giggled. The chair had produced another flower, this one a tiny, perfect rose, and was presenting it to her on the armrest like a gift.
“She gets that from you., I said.
“Get what?”
“The ability to charm inanimate objects into doing her bidding.”
Lila-Beth laughed that same snort-laugh from algebra class, the one that had made my stomach do backflips before I even understood why. “She gets everything from you. The stubbornness. The dramatic eye-rolls. The way she refuses to eat anything green.”
“She eats peas.”
“Under duress. And only if the chair purrs at them first.”
I couldn’t argue with that.
The morning sun continued its slow arc across the kitchen. Elara babbled at the lounger, which responded with soft creaks and the occasional glowing pulse. Lila-Beth’s knee pressed against mine under the table, a casual, unconscious intimacy that still made my heart skip, even after all these years.
My phone buzzed. Another email, this one from Holloway, who had somehow discovered texting at age eighty-seven and now sent daily updates about the shop, usually accompanied by blurry photos of cats he’d befriended.
Chair behaving? It read. Tell it I said hello. Got another one of Miriam’s journals turning up. More fine print. You two might want to see it.
I showed Lila-Beth. She raised an eyebrow.
“More fine print?”
“Apparently.”
“After everything? After the curse, the binding, the blood moon, everything there’s more?”
“That’s what he says.”
She stared at me for a long moment. Then she laughed that same laugh, still the most real thing in any room.
“Well.” She squeezed my hand. “At least we’re in it together.”
The lounge purred its agreement. Elara clapped her hands. Somewhere in Cedar Hollow, another chapter was beginning, one we hadn’t chosen, hadn’t expected, and wouldn’t face alone.
The fine print could wait.
Right now, we had toast to finish, a three-year-old to wrangle, and a lifetime of ordinary miracles ahead.
(until Miriam’s next surprise)
Author’s Note: The enchanted lounge currently resides at 42 Maple Street, Cedar Hollow, where it continues to produce edelweiss flowers, refuse all other sitters, and purr loudly during thunderstorms. Visitors are welcome by appointment only. Please do not sit down.
The End
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Dormouse
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Re: The Enchanted Lounger
Nice, but the pedant in me wants to know if Elara has a human father or is she a magical emanation of the two of them?
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