Michelle watched Selene - no, Cinder - take her first hesitant steps with the help of Logan and Garan. The blue gel had been washed off and for the first time in eight years, Michelle could see the tone of her skin and fine hair. In the five days since she woke up, the child had made unimaginable leaps in movement. Still stumbling and unsure, every few minutes she would look confusedly at the metal leg weighing her down as she learned to walk all over again.
âYes, I think so.â Logan helped her turn, catching her as her balance toppled. âIt would be a good checkpoint for her. Nothing solid though. Not yet.â
Cinder looked at her with half a shade of understanding before confusion filled her face again. Logan had said that she would take a few days to form memories again but Michelle couldnât help but hope the girl would remember her a little bit.
âSoup,â said Cinder, frowning as her gaze became unfocused.
It was an expression she wore often. Logan and Garan had told her the child had a netscreen in her eye to help her catch up with all that she had missed in the eight years she was asleep. Michelle wondered at how could she possibly become adjusted, how much confusion must fill her, how alone she must be. Scarlet was not much older and Michelle knew that she would have been terrified. Even though the brain scans were at the desired place, she was yet to learn how to speak in full sentences. And now, she was supposed to go out into the world.
âSoup,â was all she replied.
________________
âMaybe I should keep her here for some time,â said Michelle as she came back down with a thermos of soup, Scarletâs favourite bowl - white with pretty yellow flowers - with a set of matching cutlery and an old dinner tray. âThat way she can get a little settled before the journey.â
âIt is too dangerous,â said Logan off-hand.
Cinder was now seated on the operating table, eyes wide as Logan checked the scar tissue where her thigh met her metal leg.
âI must travel home,â said Garan, âMy wife is worried and the spread of the plague is concerning. We need to be gone before they close any borders.â
Michelle knew they were right but her heart ached a little to know that Cinder would be gone before she ever knew her. It was silly, to the child, Michelle was a little better than a stranger but to Michelle she was almost beginning to feel like a second granddaughter. She had taken care of her for all these years and now she was expected to let her go?
âYou didnât need to bring all of that,â said Logan, catching sight of the tray Michelle had prepared. âA mug would have been fine.â
âIt is her first meal, it should be done properly,â said Michelle, making her way over to them. Cinder sat back on the table, legs swinging like a schoolgirl. The gesture made her heart feel fond. âHere you go, my child.â
She set the tray across her lap as gently as she could and poured the soup into the bowl. It was just a little hot, thin tendrils of steam rising from the bowl. She had cooled it down so that the child would not have too much trouble with gulping it down.
Taking the spoon in her hand, Michelle picked up a spoonful of soup and brought it to Cinderâs mouth, âOpen up, my child.â
Gaze still confused, Cinder obeyed, letting Michelle feed her. It was a little like being with a toddler, catching a dribble of soup that spilled onto her pointed chin. She strung encouragementâs as Cinder silently let her finish half the bowl. Michelle paused then, unsure if she should have more.
âThe soup is good,â came the hesitant words from Cinder.
Michelle felt her eyes grow almost teary. Her first full sentence. âIs it,â she asked, âHave more, have as much as you want.â
Cinder smiled then, her first smile, cautious and sweet and so lovely.
Stars, the child was so pretty now that she was awake. The tanks, the surgeries, the prosthetics, the scars, none of it carried over onto her smile. Just a sweet little girl just like any other.
Michelle wondered how she would grow up, if she would become a kind person, if she would be intelligent, if she would be brave. No, she was sure of that one, she had seen it in the way she never stopped fighting for the last eight years. Michelle wondered if she would ever fall in love, if she would ever be blissfully happy. Her life had been so difficult already, she hoped she would find a home in New Beijing.
She wondered if they would ever meet again.
________________
âAces, are we finally going to try those tomatoes Wolf kept mooning over?â
Cinder laughed as Thorne shrank under Scarletâs glare. The living room was still decked up with the white flounces and flowers and bows from last night. They were a little worse for wear and drooping, more than a few ribbons on the floor.
Everyone was on the floor, chattering happily after waking up far too late from the endless celebrations. Jacin and Winter had been convinced to stay on the Rampion - âWe need to give the newlyweds time to acquainted,â Thorne had drawled suggestively, ducking from smacks from multiple hands - and the decision had been wise. When they had all made their way to the house closer to ten in the morning, a shuddering moan had been enough to make them turn back in their tracks.
Wolf had been sheepish when they were finally called back but Scarlet had held everyoneâs laughing gazes with a cool stare.
âI made tomato soup,â said Scarlet, âIt is Grandmereâs recipe. Should help you fools with your hangovers.â
Kai groaned beside her, head buried on the back of her shoulder, still reeling from his hangover. He was surprisingly light weighted and was easily the most tipsy after a singing Cress.
Cinder felt as if she was glowing as she looked at him. After what felt like hours spent kissing underneath the stars, they had walked back hand in hand, the gleaming ring safely tucked into her calf. They had wordlessly agreed to tell everyone later, revelling in the secret, as their sneaky return had prompted teasing reminders on whose wedding night it was.
A questionable drinking match with Jacin later, Cinder had to near carry him as they had stumbled back to the ship. âSo happy,â he had mumbled into her ear as she helped him onto the ramp, âStars, I love you.â
Jacin and Cress were surprisingly clear headed, helping Scarlet dole out the soup in an assortment of bowls. Watching everyone laughing, Cinder felt her heart was impossibly full.
Scarlet bent to hand her a white bowl with a yellow floral pattern and Cinder thanked her, nudging a groaning Kai to sit up. Smiling at his decidedly unroyal demeanour that morning, she lifted a spoon of soup to her mouth.
Her breath caught in her throat.
It was warm and rich and tangy and salty and herby and perfect and so familiar to her. She was safe and cozy and comfortable and she felt choked with how much the taste made her something. It was like looking at Peonyâs ID Chip or like eating the noodles Iko had sneaked from the market at the last ball or like sleeping in the rampion as Thorne flew erratically or like lying next to Kai as the world forgot them for a moment. All she could do was laugh in delight at the taste of it for reasons she just didnât know why.
She shovelled spoonfuls into her giggling mouth, uncaring of how hot it burned or how everyone was staring at her like she was finally mad as the rest of her line.
âI am sorry,â she said between laughs and breaths and gulps, âI - I donât know what has come over me. Itâs just. I. Itâs just -â She took a deep breath, willing herself to calm down for a moment.
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YâALL! I JUST REALIZED! The father of Michelle Benoitâs child was a well off Lunar named Logan Tanner, and Logan is Scarletâs grandfather, right? So, while Scarlet is only 1/4 Lunar, her father is as much Lunar as he is Earthen biologically.
Her father, who had the ability to charm anyone, despite being crap at anything else, including parenting. The boy that Michelle worries she might have spoiled too much and maybe thatâs why he turned out so self-absorbed, despite the fact that Michelle Benoit does not come across as a character who is capable of spoiling anyone. Scarletâs own mother was apparently only charmed by him until she had Scarlet, then she took off.
Now, it is entirely possible that this could happen with a fully non-bioelectrally-gifted Earthen. There are certainly people in the world who get by on charm and nothing else, and while Michelle as we know her would never spoil a child, she has admitted that she failed to balance parenting with her career back when she was raising her son.
But combining these things with the fact that he is half Lunar makes me wonder if the guy didnât have a little bit of the Lunar gift that no one recognized, and thatâs part of what made him so charming. What might have made it so hard for his mom to say no to him when she wasnât working. And while Scarletâs mom is hardly the first to dump her baby on the dad and then take off, there could be another layer of motivation if she was compelled to be with the father via unwitting mental manipulation. And if no one could resist him, it would certainly compound the self centered attitude he developed.
None of these things really need superpowers to explain them. But the fact that he could have had some power adds another layer to everything. He wouldnât even need much to simply influence Earthens.
I can only imagine what would have happened if Michelle had decided to keep Cinder and raise her with her granddaughter Scarlet.
Tbh
yes!!! i adore scarlet and cinderâs dynamic. underrated duo frrr.
scarlet would definitely be an overprotective older sister. especially since michelle would tell scarlet that cinderâs been through a lot and has nobody. scarlet has a passion for standing up for underprivileged people (she did so for cinder in the books) so of course sheâd bite at anyone who is mean to cinder.
cinder would probably be more snappy and argumentative if she was raised with scarlet. more determined to stick up for herself, especially since now she knows that people will have her back. oh my shaylas!!!
cinder would probably be more wary of wolf. sheâd hate him for letting ran eat michelle and is probably anti-wolflet. then she warms up to him after wolf treats her like a little sister.
keep listening keep listening i'm gonna explain myself just sit down and see the vision with me
cinder as rumi, scarlet as mira, cress as zoey
celine is michelle benoit i want to say because i feel like it could lowkey work - like obvs she wouldn't be dead in this au but the idea of michelle hiding who cinder is from everyone else feels a lot like what celine does with rumi in kdh - since scarlet never knew cinder was THERE, i think it'd be in character for michelle to hide something like that from her grandaughter
as for winter, i'd like to think she and kai team up to convince levana (gwi-ma) to do a demon boyband
they would SO be besties in another lifetime bro you don't undersTAND
as for the saja boys that's hard
i guess we could line up the main ships from tlc with the saja boys characters and huntrix girls???
like kai is jinu
wolf is abby
thorne is like an anti-mystery LMAO but we're gonna go with it
ran can be baby because it just fits so well i can't explain why
as for romance....maybe thorne is romance?? jacin as mystery then????? like that would make the dynamics different than in kdh but i think it could be doable
oh and iko's obviously bobby be so for real
can't figure out why she WOULDNT put herself in the spotlight but tbh it could just be a similar plot to tlc where she doesn't have a consistent body until 3/4 of the way through XD
once she does she's taking cinder's spot as lead singer lmaoooooo
does this make sense to anyone but me please tumblr speak
Summary: Cinder reflects on her past and what it means to finally feel free. (WC: 566)
A/N: Hello, I finally finished one of my many drafts. This is a drabble because it's not very long (and I wanted to start off small). There's no real plot, just a lot of inner monologue inspired by Radiohead's "Let down." I'm ngl it's kind of depressing and random lol. This is my first attempt at creative writing--so it's a bit stiff. Please be nice. For context, this is a short add-on to the scene where Cinder gets stabbed. The scenes that follow are set post-canon. Constructive feedback is really really appreciated! đ
Warnings: Mentions of blood.
Cinder only remembered her dull reddish-brown hair vaguely. Her memory could barely make up the features of her face or the softness of her voice. But, she did remember the gentleness of the hands that caressed her as she whispered, âOne day, youâre gonna grow wings.â A final goodbye to the cyborg bound for New Beijing.
â
Before Cinder was Selene, she had always found the statement to be rather odd. But now, lying in a pool of her own blood on the throne room floor, it made sense.
She was finally going to be free. Death would grant her that. Free from prejudice, from suffering, from the tyrant queen.
But Cinder didnât want to die. Not nowânot when she finally had a bed to sleep in, a home, people she could call friends. Noâfamily. Not when there was Kai.
Kai's worried face swam into view. He shouted something, his voice sounding so far away. She would miss his copper brown eyes. His smile. She grinned at Kaiâprobably looking insane. But how could she not smile around him? He made her feel so.. giddy. Like a normal teenage girl.
âYou look so pretty,â Cinder slurred, her voice barely a whisper.
A tear slipped down Kaiâs cheek as he gathered her into his lap.
âYouâre going to make it, Cinder. Stay with me, okay? We need you. I need you.â
Her hearing dulled, her vision blurred, and the taste of blood in her mouth made her uncomfortable. Nauseous. Rage burned through the pain. Levana had stolen her youth, and now she was stealing her freedom. Michelle Benoit hadnât meant angel wings, she realizedâbut wings of freedom. And in that final breath, Cinder felt hatred more than pain.
â
Cinder had been visiting France for a diplomatic summit with their newly elected leader to discuss trade between Luna and France. She carved out time to visit Scarlet and Wolfâand even repaired Scarletâs podship after Wolf had crash-landed it mid-lesson.
She caught herself staring at the latch to the small doorâleading to the secret operation room. Where sheâd become a cyborg. Where Michelle Benoit had hidden her. Saved her. Named her Cinder.
âCinder?â Scarletâs voice broke through her thoughts. âAre you listening?â
âOh. Yeahâsorry. No, I think Wolf will like the orchids.â
Scarlet didnât look annoyed. Just soft. âYou know, you can visit the bunker. If you want.â
With a quiet nod, Cinder gingerly climbed down the ladder. Scarlet followed.
The room was just as she remembered it. The same room sheâd once explored with Thorne, back when they were fugitives many moons ago. She inhaled deeply, the scent of old metal and earth still clinging to the walls.
Scarletâs voice was gentle. âDo you think youâll ever be able to forget?â
Cinderâs eyes burned as they landed on the old schematicâher eleven-year-old body rendered in cold lines and annotations.
âItâs hard to forget your past when itâs written all over your body,â she said quietly.
Scarlet hummed. A beat passed.
âBut... I kind of like who I have become,â Cinder added. âEven if it hurt.â
â
Engulfed with nostalgia, Cinder figured it was only right to visit Michelle Benoit's grave. The sun stood low in the sky.
She readjusted the flowers in the bouquet and gently placed it against the headstone. âYou were right,â she whispered, almost inaudibly. âI did grow wings.â
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Did marissa ever explain how the fuck cinder end up in Michelles basement, or how Michelle had something to do with her lineage? or why Logan had something to do whit that (i know he was lunar but what was his job that he was able to hide and save Selene)? or why Michelle and Logan met and again WHY cinder ended up in her basement living for years? Did we all just assume that was right and agreed with it? I feel kind of stupid ngl
ââHello, Michelle.â His voice was a wearier version of the one she had adored all those years ago, but it still filled her with memories and loneliness and warmth.âÂ
Tell him hello
When Logan first brought Selene to Michelle, he stayed in the house. No one visited her anyway and he couldnât go into townânot with the risk of being discovered. While Selene was still in such critical condition, he would need to watch over her. Once she was stable, he would leave.  Â
Logan slept on the couch in the living room next to Seleneâs chamber. In her current state, she was at risk of a heart attack or capture from enemies. Michelle had offered them the spare bedroom, but the suspension tank couldnât be brought up the stairs. Once, when she passed by the staircase, she remembered the portraits on her wall. Four-year-old Scarlet playing in a sandbox. Herself and her son, a rare occasion where they were both smiling. Michelle made no effort to conceal them. Logan was far too distracted to pay attention, but she wonderedâif for a moment he didâwould he look at the photo of her and a three-month-old Luc and notice that she looked around the same age as when they had first met? Â
She hoped he wouldnât. A bizarre fear persisted, that he would be disappointed in her if he learnt of her failings as a mother to his son.Â
During the daytime, while Logan was down in the bunker preparing it to house the body, Michelle was tasked with monitoring the child. The form was so grotesque, so mangled and inhuman that she couldnât bear more than a cursory glance. In the evenings she would prepare them a meal. Again, Logan would eat by the child, and though Michelle initially joined him, sitting on the lounge chair by the lamp, it became too awkward. The silence. The utensils scraping on ceramic plates. The hum of the alien pod. Â
The meals became simpler as she began to run out of ingredients. She had put off her usual grocery run since his arrival, worried that if she left the property and one of her neighbours flew by and noticed a man leaving her podship hanger, it would arouse suspicion. Then she realised that if the locals didnât see her at her typical weekly outing, they might come to the house to check up on her. That would be worse. Â
She never bought fresh produce from the grocer, usually just the essentialsâflour and sugar and meat. On this occasion, as she attempted to escape a conversation with chatty Madame Manon Bouchard, she spied a stand of fresh dragon fruit right by the milk aisle.  Â
âYou donât even have zucchini?â she had once asked Logan, as they stood together in his kitchen, his hands around her waist. Â
He had laughed into her hair. âNow youâre just making up words.â Â
She peeled the carrots, chopped them and tossed them into the pot. Then came the wine. Or what was left of it; the rest in their bellies. Â
She looked over her shoulder, flicking his nose. âDonât worry. If you come to Earth, I will make you all kinds of things. With zucchini and lychee and rhubarb and dragon fruit.â Â
âSure,â he agreed with a fond shake of his head. âIâll try your imaginary dragon fruit.â Â
Michelle was struck by such an unexpected pang of emotion that she didnât notice Manonâs offended scoff as she wandered over to the stand mid-conversation. Â
That evening, she made dragon fruit tartlets for dessert. She thought, briefly, to pair it with a ragout. But she thought that might be making it a little too easy for him. Â
After dinner, Logan brought the plates into the kitchen and washed them in the sink. She never asked him to do this. He always did. Â
âHere,â she said, placing a plate by the dishrack. Atop it sat a perfect tartlet, drizzled with cream from her cow and strawberries from her field. âThis is for you.â Â
He glanced at it. âThank you.â Â
Once he was done at the sink, he sat at the kitchen table and ate. His brow was furrowed, his mind always a thousand light-years away. Â
âItâs dragon fruit,â she ventured, tracing her eyes over that brow, waiting for recognition.  Â
Logan nodded, took his final bite and brought this plate over to the sink. âThank you, Michelle.â Â
A jolt of pain rippled through her. She turned away from him, heading to the living room. âIâll, uh, check on the princess.â Â
His grunt was all to indicate that heâd heard her. But the fruit, the memories, she knew he hadnât remembered at all. Â
âââ
âShe couldnât imagine how this child could sleep for her entire life and then be expected to become a queen upon her return to society. But that would be Loganâs job, whenever he returned. There were years still before anyone would know who this child was going to become.âÂ
âââ
Eight years later, Logan stayed in the bunker while they were waking Selene up, as did Linh Garan. Scarlet could never learn of their presence, yet Michelle was beginning to suspect that even if her granddaughter was removed from the equation, Logan wouldnât risk leaving the princessâs side. He was cautious, yes, but most of all, he was manically paranoid. Â
She hadnât believed he was losing his mind, but after weeks of observing him, in surgery and in conversation and at meals, she began to believe him. Â
The risk of Scarlet discovering them put her on edge, too. Thankfully school had started up again that week, so they had at least a few hours in the daytime where they didnât need to be as surreptitious. Even then, Michelle would tense; Scarletâthe little hothead she wasâtended to get into arguments at school and stomp home without any warning to her grandmother. Today was a Sunday, and Michelle had sent her off to the neighbourâs house. Old Madame Boudreaux had needed someone to help her set up a new netscreen, and fortunately for Michelle, she had a propensity for forcing all house guests to learn the history of every knick-knack and porcelain doll in her museum of a home. Scarlet wouldnât be able to leave for several hours yet. Â
This was the only time Logan was willing to be parted from Selene, no, Cinder, five days before she was to be taken away to the Eastern Commonwealth. She was caked in gel, an insect freshly emerged from its egg, slimy and tinged green. She needed to be bathed. Â
Michelle had been more than hesitant to bring the child into her home, but there was no running water in the bunker. It was too difficult to carry the girl up the ladder with old bones, so the task had fallen to Garan. Although the man was set to be her adoptive father, he was rather unnatural in holding her. She hoped it was simply a product of unfamiliarity and not a sign of what kind of father he would be to the princess. Â
They took her inside the house while she was still asleep. It wasnât much different from her waking state, except for the groaning and squirming. Then Logan and Garan left Michelle with her in the bathroom. She woke as Michelle began running a warm soapy cloth over her arms, dissolving the crusted gel. A proper bath would be too aggressive for her fragile skin, the joints between flesh and prostheses still red and inflamed. Â
Michelle wished the girl had stayed asleep. Odd as it may seem, Michelle wasnât quite adept at interacting with children. Her rather disastrous upbringing of her son proved that. She only bonded with Scarlet so easily because the little hothead was just as stubborn as herself. But with this blank slate of a child, Michelle felt almost awkward. Â
She grasped the shower head and gently cupped Cinderâs scalp under her palm. âAll right, Cinder. Letâs wash your hair.â  Â
Though the water was a safe tepid she flinched, eyes tearing open and hands scrambling to grasp the corners of the bathtub. Michelle murmured soothing shhs and itâs okayâs. For the first time since waking, she looked at Michelle, awareness filling her gaze, but with it, harshness. Â
Logan had assured her that the child would not wake with the mental faculties of a toddler, that the brain stimulations had successfully advanced her to the comprehension level befitting her age. Michelle was secretly unconvinced. The girl moved in a haze, more like a newborn than even a three-year-old, as though she had regressed during stasis. Â
But then she would cast a look at Michelle, long and loaded, and she would feel that she had been complicit in some crime. Â
Nevertheless, the hair had to be washed, so Michelle used her free hand to still the girl as she soaked the hair from roots to ends. Cinder eventually gave up in squirming, limbs still too weak to offer any form of escape. Â
She made quick work of the shampoo and conditioner. With her body carefully untouched by the stream, Cinder began to shiver.  Â
âAll done, Cinder,â Michelle assured. She sat her up and wrapped a towel around her. âDo you want to try your walking?â Â
Cinder remained motionless but allowed Michelle to lift her. She groaned as she heaved the child out of the bath and set her on the ground. âReady?â Â
Cinder took the smallest step forward on the tile and immediately lurched forward. Hands at the ready, Michelle was quick to stop her from falling. Righting her, she guided gently, âThatâs okay. Letâs try again.â Â
Garan had been teaching her to walk and had partial success thus far. A look of concentration encased the girlâs face now as she lifted her stiff foot and forced it in front of her.  Â
Cinder wobbled but stayed upright. She gripped Michelleâs hand tighter. Â
Through several arduous steps and a few stumbles, they reached the bedroom. Michelle considered but decided not to repeat Garanâs encouragements. âYouâre doing well,â âalmost there,â âgood job.â They were perfunctory. No number of pleasantries could coax a ship to fly or teach a horse to run. Cinder alone would decide if she walked. Â
Michelle lowered her to the bed, reaching for the outfit she had laid out. âThese are your new clothes, Cinder. I have another set for you to take as well.âÂ
The goosebumps on her skin calmed as the fleecy cotton covered her arms. Cinder weakly tugged at the sleeves, trying to pull them down with little success until Michelle intervened. Â
âYouâll have a new mother soon. Sheâll help you get dressed if youâre still not ready yet.â Â
Michelle shimmied the pants up her legs. Her fingernail accidentally grazed the link between flesh and metal on her thigh and Cinder whimpered. Michelle flinched. Â
She would be warm, at least. Not much could be done yet about the unnatural pallor of her skin. The hair, clean but still tangled, with split ends running up to the roots, now she could do something about that. Â
Michelle found her salon scissors and brush, heaving onto her knees on the bed behind Cinder. Her muscles groaned as they rested on the unsteady surface and she swayed, but the scissors stayed firmly gripped in her fist. Cinder couldnât be trusted around them yet. Â
Her fingers picked up some chunks of hair and raked through them. The girl whined even at the slightest tug. âI know it doesnât feel nice, Cinderâ she said as she worked the brush through the ends. âBut we have to push through the pain to make it better.â Â
Her words had run ahead of her. As the bristles danced through the brown strands, she continued, âIâve had to do that many times in my lifetime. As will you.â Â
Cinderâs shoulders drooped. With the worst knots untangled, she was a statue.Â
Satisfied, Michelle lay a towel on the quilt to catch the hair and began cutting. It was longâeight yearsâ worth of growthâand yet it was still uneven. Michelle had a vision of this girl as a 3-year-old with oozing pus in patches over her burnt scalp. They had since healed, but the hair was brittle in some parts more than others. A good ten centimetres off should even it out. Â
Michelle feathered the ends, brushing the loose hair from her shirt. âAll done. Would you like to see?â Â
To Michelleâs astonishment, Cinder seemed to nod. It wasnât exactly obviousâperhaps just a meaningless reflexâbut perhaps it had been intentional.  Â
Michelle set the scissors on the towel. It took another test of patience to help Cinder stagger back into the bathroom and Michelleâs arms were aching with exertion from carrying her by the shoulders. Â
Cinder took the last few steps on her own and gripped the bench, staring at herself in the mirror. Michelle watched her. Â
No expression. No recognition. There was no mirror in the bunker. Did Cinder realise this was the first time sheâd seen herself since she was a toddler? Did she even comprehend that it was her? Despite how much Logan swore that she had been educated, caught up to speed on normal childhood development, had it failed? Â
Was this girl not a girl, but a dead soulâs consciousness forced into a machine, functioning only through robotics and wires and machinery? Â
Michelle had to grip the towel rail to steady herself. Â
How could this child become queen? How could she save them all?
âSelene,â she said suddenly, then immediately shook her head, âno, Cinder. You must listen to me.â She released the rail and took the girlâs shoulders into her hands. Cinder turned to face her. Â
âCinder. I donât know what will happen. I donât know if they will come for you. But whatever happens, you canât let them take everything from you.â Michelle pressed her forehead against Cinderâs, awkwardness dispelled by the divine need to impart this instruction. She conjured every ounce of motherly wisdom that she had lacked with her son, and thought about what she would tell Scarlet, had Scarlet been the girl before her. Â
âThey have already taken so much from you. They will want to make you a leader. They will forget that you are just a girl.â She pulled away, her eyes imploring. âWhen they ask you to fight, you must learn to say yes. But when they ask everything of you, you must learn to say no.â Exhaling every breath sheâd taken in over the past eight years, she asked, âOkay?â Â
Cinder blinked slowly through full lashes. A minuscule light darted back and forth in her left eye. A bionic eye. Fake. Her heart. Brain. Lungs. All of it. Â
Maybe synthetic eyes couldnât light up with joy or with recognition. Maybe they couldnât convey sadness or understanding. So maybe Cinder had been understanding Michelle this entire time. Michelle was the one who had been blind.Â
Cinderâs mouth opened. She began to nod. Again, it could be a meaningless tick, but then, in the quietest voice Michelle had ever heard, she spoke. Â
â...Oâkay.â Â
âââ
âGrand-mĂšre, who is Logan Tanner?âÂ
Her grandma brushed a light kiss against Scarletâs forehead.Â
âHeâs a good man, Scarlet. He would have loved you.â
âââ
Â
Cinder began speaking sparsely, mostly nos and yeses and whys. She voiced her first full sentence on the day she left.Â
âWhere are we going?â she asked Garan as he buckled her into her seat in the hover.Â
âWeâre going home, Cinder,â he explained with a light tone. Once she was strapped in, he stepped away and the door slid shut.Â
Garan turned to Michelle and Logan. âWellâŠâ he trailed off.Â
âThank you again, Garan.â Logan said sincerely, taking his hand and shaking it. âThis could not have been accomplished without your skills and discretion.â His tone became grave. âAnd for the danger you have inflicted upon yourself, I am truly sorry.âÂ
Garan shook his head. âDonât be, Logan. I am honoured to play this role in shaping history.â Â
Thus far, he had seemed to Michelle a curious savant, enticed more by the prospect of having a Lunar subject for his inventions than by the theophanic-like encounter with a resurrected myth. Yet he demonstrated now a trace of comprehension in his tight brow. He understood the risk of accepting this burden. Â
He offered Michelle a nod and rounded to the other side of the hover. âGood-bye then.â Garan opened the door and slid inside.Â
Michelleâs attention was entrapped by Cinder. She was staring right at her, blinking slowly, and Michelle suddenly felt cruel to not have parted with a hug, a kiss, a promise that everything would eventually work out. But Michelle could not feed such lies to this child. Cinder was somehow entirely different to the girl that had haunted the ground beneath Michelleâs feet for the past eight years. That had been Selene. Cinder was the one who had woken up.Â
Mostly, Michelle was sad to send her off, sure in the deepest fissures of her heart that her new life in the Eastern Commonwealth would not be as âfineâ as Garan promised it to be.Â
The hover lifted from the ground and picked up speed, yet Cinderâs searching brown eyes lingered down the full length of the driveway.Â
Once the rattle of whirring motors faded and the disturbed dust had drifted back to the ground, only Michelle and Logan were left.Â
They looked out to the road, three arm lengths apart.Â
Michelle exhaled shakily. âWell, there she goes.âÂ
âI doâŠâ he sighed. âI trust he wonât betray her to the authorities or treat her badly, I just donâtâŠâ He pursed his lips.Â
âDonât what?âÂ
Logan clasped his hands together, not meeting her eyes. âMichelle, there is no one on Earth or Luna I trust more than you. If it hadnât been so threatening to both her and your safety, I would want her under your protection for as long as possible. I donât know that Garan will manage this burden in the way you have.âÂ
The honesty rocked her. So confessionally sweet, and yet so obvious in its failings. Because he shouldnât trust her so, not when they had such a brief connection to begin with. Not when he probably had a life on Luna after her, maybe a wife and children; children that perhaps looked vaguely alike their own son. There was no room for such unbosoming, not for co-conspirators in treasonous affairs that would surely catch up to them both.Â
But perhaps, wouldnât have been nice if there was no Selene at all? If he had simply escaped Luna to find her, and if he could sleep in the house rather than the bunker? Sit across from her at the dining table and tell stories to Scarlet, whom he would surely adore?Â
Â
âWe are older than Garan,â she said soberly. âBut he will learnâas we did.âÂ
He nodded distractedly, perhaps disappointed. Was he disheartened that she did not acknowledge his praise towards her?Â
Â
 If he was, he didnât dwell on it. âI leave tomorrow. It would be too suspicious for me to follow the hover. Granted Iâm still sane by the time I reach the Commonwealth, Iâll check on her, just for safety.âÂ
Right. He was losing his mind, or so he said. He seemed always to be present with her, but she did notice him losing his train of thought when conversing with Garan and becoming fidgety when Cinder would refuse their gentle prompts to practise walking. â...And if youâre not sane?âÂ
His eyes bored into hers, distant as though foreseeing the forthcoming years. âIâve already done my work.âÂ
Her port chimed, an alarm reminding her that Scarlet would be due home soon. Michelle had essentially forced Scarlet to go spend the afternoon at a friendâs house, but she wouldnât be deterred for too long. Logan needed to hide. âYouâll have to retire to the bunker for the night.âÂ
He stepped away. âOf course. Then this is goodbye.âÂ
She startled. âI wonât see you off tomorrow?âÂ
âTomorrow is Saturday. On Luna, school children have the weekend off. Iâm assuming itâs the same on Earth.âÂ
Sheâd forgotten, so terrified of Scarlet uncovering the confidential mission happening right under her nose that the days had blurred into insignificance. Logan never spoke of Scarlet, but they had all been aware of the oblivious bystander preventing them from acting in the open. âRight. I hadnât realised.âÂ
Logan appeared to contemplate what he said next. âI am truly grateful to have known you, Michelle.âÂ
She pressed her lips, feeling twenty-nine again in everything but body. âTake care of yourself, Logan.âÂ
And then he was walking away. No embrace, no handshake or nod as Garan had exchanged. Â
The wind whipped through her hair and the sunset before him cast a silhouetteâan old man tramping through the crops.Â
She hadnât said it. That she trusted him impossibly more than anyone else, too. That this trust had long blurred the lines of devotion. Their fling was remembered as having lasted an entire lifetime. She wondered if she would soon regret her silence.Â
Michelle turned and strolled back to the house. Twoâdiametrically opposed in direction, no longer having Selene to tether them together. But, with a hand on her chest, Michelle resolved that if Cinder reclaimed her throne, freed Luna and opened the way for Lunars and Earthens to have peace, she knew who she would fly to.Â
âââ
âOn Luna, I knew the man who brought you to Earth and performed your surgery. I tracked him down in an attempt to find you, but by then heâd already started to lose his mind. All I could get out of him was that you were somewhere here, in the Commonwealth.â Â
Tell him good-bye
âWhere is she?âÂ
Logan was shoved backwards, head lolling as the whiplash caught him. He dumbly flailed his hands but was too blindsided to direct a blow. Â
Sage Darnel was much shorter than Logan, but he towered over him as Loganâs knees gave out. He crumpled to the ground.Â
âIs she alive?â Sage demanded again, lugging him up by the collar. His sky-blue eyes were stormy and fierce and Logan couldnât hold them.Â
His breaths were shallow and irregular, mind vague and unfocused. He couldnât remember where he was, why he was hereâŠÂ
âLogan!â Sage barked.Â
âAlive,â he gasped, wincing as nails dug into his flesh. âAlive. Barely.â Â
When Sage had ambushed him outside the android dealer, Logan had taken off with the tenacity of a sprinter. But his internal compass failed him and Sage chased him down, cornering him in this alleyway. Â
Sage snarled, his canines gleaming in the moonlight. âWhat do you mean?âÂ
âBroken,â bubbled from his lips. âToo broken. Bone and skin and ashes.âÂ
âWhat are you saying, Logan?â he spat.Â
Princess Seleneâs burnt corpse flashed past his vision. Blood and pus oozing from welts. Bones and skin mangled. Her charred eyes in his hands. Pieces of her brain sitting on his operating table. âI had to fix her.âÂ
âFix what? Her body? From the fire?âÂ
Chopping and stitching and sawing and praying. âMetal and grafts.âÂ
His anger wilted with realisation. âSheâs a cyborg, isn't she?âÂ
Stupidly, Logan thought that this shift might give him an advantage. He wrestled against the iron grip, sneering, âLevana sent you to take her!â Â
Sage shoved him further up the wall, invading his space so closely that Logan could feel his breath on his chin. âI want to rip Levana apart with my own two hands and return Selene to her throne.âÂ
âWhy?â he choked.Â
âBecause she killed my daughter. Whatâs your reason?âÂ
He had none, no personal stake, except for the sake of his country. âTo fight her,â he settled on, not really knowing what it meant.Â
âGood. So where is she?âÂ
Stars, how did they ever take this manâs daughter away from him? Logan was certain he was only a millisecond away from smashing his skull against the brick wall.Â
âLogan!âÂ
âCommonwealth! The Eastern Commonwealth!â he cried, awaiting the blow. Â
âWhere? Where in the Eastern Commonwealth?âÂ
He couldnât feel the blow, but it must have come. Why else was his brain screaming? His body burning hotter than a playhouse in a toddlerâs nursery? Incoherent spluttering vomited from his mouth, breaths coming out but none able to come in. He was asphyxiating. He was bleeding. He was brainless.Â
Sageâs frantic blue eyes were not enough to keep Loganâs attention. It was fixed at the end of the alleywayâa figure drenched in moon light approached.Â
âWhere?!âÂ
âYes Logan, where? Where did you put her?â mocked Dr Eliot, her silhouette growing clearer.Â
âI saved her, I swear!â Logan protested.Â
Dr Eliot shook her head, expression vacant. Blood began to trickle down her scalp in rivulets, dripping down her eyelids and lips. Then the trickle turned into a stream, swimming down her white doctorâs coat and staining it, the blood black in the moonlight.Â
âI did, I-I promise,â he stammered, âI did, I did, I did.âÂ
Thud. He was dropped to the floor. He barely noticed. Â
âYouâve lost your mind,â Sage snarled and stomped down the alleyway, walking straight through the bloodied ghost. Â
It began to rain.Â
Logan lay on the damp, cold cement, heart palpitating and eyes unseeing.Â
Yes, lost my mind, his mind thought, as Dr Eliotâs blood drifted from the sky and blanketed him.Â
Yes, yes, yes, yes yes yes yes.Â
âââ
Before he had lost his mind, it had been kind to him. He needed enough mental clarity to perform Seleneâs surgeries. With that accomplished, his sanity promptly handed him a letter of resignation.Â
Three months. Logan had elected to wait three months after leaving Michelle before following Garan into New Beijing. Three months before he surreptitiously checked on the child. Time was needed to put distance between Logan and Garan, to stamp out any suspicions of a connection.Â
As the reins of timekeeping flung out of his handsâanother consequence of the Lunar sicknessâthree months turned into two and half years. It was then that Sage Darnel found Logan and pinned him to the wall of the alleyway. How long Sage had been on Earth, Logan didnât know. He no longer remembered how long he himself had been on Earth.Â
His encounter with Sage only worsened his fear. It became even more imperative that he avoid the princess. He could only hope that Sage either never found her or that he was true to his word; that he too wished to see her enthroned.Â
But any others lurking around, searching for the princess, may not share those motives.Â
Logan lived as a nomad, moving from place to place, province to province and never staying long enough to become a local. When he had escaped Luna for Earth, he had left the pilot helping him all his assets, his home and his investments. In exchange, the pilot converted all of Loganâs savings into Earthen currency registered under his new false identity. He had enough to sustain him over the years, knowing there was no possibility of him working again. Not as a doctor, with a mind so demented. Not with the chance of another Lunar finding him.Â
He was pitied by some, ignored by most. More than once was he asked if he had wandered away from his nursing home. Once he was robbed, his portscreen stolen from him. It had all his connections to Linh Garan, but Logan had programmed it to delete all incriminating evidence if ever it was opened by someone other than himself. Now he really had to trust in Garan, because he wouldnât soon be able to reach him.Â
Between harrowing visions that reduced him to a trembling ball on the floor and sleeping and eating and shuffling about, he had memories. His younger brother tossing him a ball. His elderly patient sobbing as he delivered a terminal diagnosis. In the library, reading about the atmosphere of Earth. The pictures did no justice to the true colour of the sky, someone had once told himâŠ.who?Â
One day as he wandered aimlessly around a grocery store, bumping into androids and accidentally knocking over shelf displays, a kindly-looking young woman stopped him and asked if he had a wife she could call to come collect him.Â
I donât think so, he had said, and she smiled pityingly.Â
Logan had almost married twenty years ago. Bright and cheery Evelyn Eliot, with the mousy blonde hair and always concerned grey eyes. She was the aunt of one of Loganâs students and an engineer in Artemisiaâs maglev system. Logan grew to care for her. He never revealed to her how truly malcontent he was against the regimeâhe didnât think she shared such sympathies. But she was kind, and he would not be unhappy with her.Â
One afternoon, two months before their wedding date, she burst into the medical centre, face flushed with sweat beading her forehead. In a low whisper, she hastily told him that two guards had visited her at her work and reassigned her to outer sectors to strengthen the security of the maglev system. The people were becoming defiant, the risk they might try to cross borders growing greater. Evelyn didnât want to leave. She promised him that she wouldnât go.Â
Perhaps Logan should have confessed his hatred of the monarchy to her, because perhaps then she would have been resigned to the knowledge that refusal was not an option.Â
That night, Evelyn disappeared. Bioelectrically manipulated onto a maglev shuttle and shipped over to her new assignment in the outer sectors. With the laws prohibiting travel between sectors, she was never to return. With the two of them unmarried, Logan could not follow her.Â
He resolutely gave up on all inklings of companionship and love after that.Â
A week later, heâd stumbled upon his former student, now Dr Eliot, tearing up her office in a fury. She threw vitals scanners to the floor, smashed vials under her feet. Â
âThey took her!â she screamed, wrestling with a lab cart. It crashed to the ground with a furious smash! âThey stole her just because they can! Weâll never see her again! I hate them, I hate all of them!âÂ
She raised a stethoscope, ready to hurl it but startled when she realised she was aiming it at him.Â
A hand whipped over her mouth. âI donât, I didnâtâŠI donât despise the monarchyâI swearââÂ
Logan hushed her with a held finger. âBe careful who you say those things around, Doctor.â And then in an impossibly low murmur, âNot everyone around here shares the same sentiments as we do.âÂ
Her eyes widened.Â
They never spoke again of their shared resistance. But their bond was always stronger after that, even stronger than that of a mentor and a student. More than that of once-to-be uncle and niece.Â
That must have been the reason why, when the nursery went up in flames, she sent for him rather than one of the younger, fitter doctors who could have raced over much sooner. Why when she was taken in to be questioned by Levana and her obsequious snake Sybil Mira, she entrusted Selene into his care.Â
All he could remember now about Dr Eliot was the blood stretching the lengths of that alleyway.Â
âââ
âIâll try to keep an eye on her for as long as I can, but Iâm not sure I will still be lucid enough to tell her the truth once sheâs ready. Itâs possible that responsibility will fall to Garan.âÂ
âââ
Linh Garan. ID #0082700743. Deceased 121 T.E. Cause of Death: Letumosis.Â
It took a week for the understanding to pass through his haze of incomprehension. 121 T.E. That was four years ago. The girl must be nowâŠohâŠfifteen?Â
It had all been prompted by a ring of blue bruises covering a dead manâs arms. Loganâs roommateâa young man kicked out of home by his ex-wife, almost as vague and aimless as Loganâhad stumbled into the share house one day panting and dead-eyed. Loganâs medical training resurged, winning over his incognizance. He triaged the man, asking his symptoms, observing his breathing. When Logan took his wrist to check his pulse, he saw the bruises.Â
The blue fever. He commed for an emergency hover from the manâs port and hid when the med droids came to collect him.Â
Surely he had contracted it himself. It could take days for the symptoms of the plague to manifest, and they slept on opposite sides of the same room in twin beds. But if the med droids found him and took him, they would discover that he was Lunar.Â
No, if he was going to die, he would do it here, hidden away.Â
After three days of mania, fasting and acceptance, no symptoms arose.Â
He couldnât fathom a reason why he hadnât caught it. No Earthen had ever recovered from the disease. Immunity. It had to be connected to his Lunar genealogy. Logan began to posit that Lunar defectors like himself had brought it to Earth in the first place.Â
The second realisation came as he was absentmindedly watching a newsfeed about the cyborg draft in the Eastern Commonwealth. If Selene was called in for the draft, exposed to the disease and found to be immune, she would become a subject of curiosity. Garan must be warned.Â
He had never once contacted Garan since he took the princess, dreading that someone could hack his portscreen and connect the dots. But as he now searched his profile on the portscreen he claimed from his deceased roommate, he discovered the truth.Â
Garan was dead. Gone only weeks after heâd taken the princess away. Now who could tell her of her own identity? Garan and himself were the only ones who knew. Sage still evidently had not found her.Â
AndâŠÂ
And Michelle.Â
He hadnât consciously thought of her in a while. He was occasionally reminded of her; a French voice in a newsfeed, a smell of earth and dirt reminiscent of her farm, some dish filling his belly with the warmth of one of her stews.Â
Even now, just at thought of her, a taste of something fruity and tangy coated his tongue. Â
He expelled the aching from his chest. Michelle was so much wiser than him. She could help the girl become queen. If he could find Selene and bring her back to MichelleâŠno, that would endanger Michelle. He couldnât.Â
Logan would find Linh Cinder and tell her the truth himself.Â
âââ
It took three months to reach New Beijing from where he had been decaying in Uzbekistan. Travel was near impossible with no mental legs to stand on, and Logan kept going in circles, catching the wrong maglevs, seeing visions along the way that caused him to flee in the opposite direction. This he could try to push past, but gradually he became more and more certain that he was being followed. Something was chasing him, observing him, but every time he turned around, the pursuer disappeared.Â
Finally, a backpacker took pity on him and took him under his wing, guiding him through maglevs and hostels until they reached a suburb just outside the grimy, charming capital of the Eastern Commonwealth. They parted ways amicably at the doorstep of the Linh residence, a squat home among rows of identically small abodes, all with worn awnings, chipped paint and litter strewn across the footpath. Â
The house immediately to the left had a broken window, glass shards spilled on a patch of weeds. Logan was well accustomed to less than pleasant lodging, but even this street curdled his stomach.Â
âI hope you can find your grandson, my brother,â said the kind traveller. He flashed a two fingered salute. âPeace and love, man.âÂ
âThank you,â said Logan, sort of wishing he remembered the free spiritâs name. Once the rickety shuttle hover trundled away, Logan pressed the bell.Â
Silence. He pressed the button again two more times. This was the address listed under Garanâs name; Logan had confirmed it at least fifty times a day. Finally after the fourth ring an anxious looking woman appeared, cracking the door open by a sliver and peeking out.Â
âH-hello,â he stammered. âAreâare you...Linh Adri?âÂ
She shook her head quickly.Â
Breathing heavily, he frowned. âYouâre not?âÂ
âNo.âÂ
Logan blinked rapidly. As the woman began to close the door, he shouted, âWait!âÂ
Her hand halted.Â
âDo you know where Linh Adri is? OrâŠLinhâŠLinh Cinder?âÂ
Her guarded eyes softened, the most infinitesimal change, but noticeable in her tone when she spoke, âThe mechanic?âÂ
â...Pardon?âÂ
âThat girl. Linh Cinder. I donât know where she lives now. But the neighbours here remember her. She used to fix their water heaters and portscreens. They say sheâs a mechanic now.âÂ
âWhere? Do you know?â he blurted loudly, stepping closer.Â
She backed away, hands braced defensively. âNew Beijing Market. Thatâs all I know!âÂ
Then she slammed the door.Â
Linh Cinder. He never dared to netsearch her name. He struggled even to say it aloud. Every corner he turned, some vision was there to taunt him, singing the name again and again in a dissonant melody, mocking him. They would find her. They would take her. Â
A flash caught his eye. Something, someone appearedâjust for a moment. He scanned the street, trying to identify the figure, but there was nothing. Goosebumps erupted on his arms, but he shook off the panic. Still, some premonition deep in his gut insisted the apparition was real. Was familiar.Â
Logan stumbled away from the porch, took out his portscreen, and punched in New Beijing Market.Â
âââ
âScarlet couldnât bring herself to tell her grandmother that Logan Tanner was dead. Had gone crazy. Had killed himself.âÂ
âââ
The hover spat him out at New Beijing Market. It was exactly the sort of place Logan hated to be now; crowded, loud, confusing and hot. His internal compass misfired amongst the cramped booths and overwhelming din. In places like this, he would only escape once the sun was setting and shopkeepers were pulling down the rollers.Â
He stumbled forward, moved by a greater purpose.Â
His eyes scanned every booth around him, searching for anything resembling a mechanicâs haven. He remembered Garanâs tools and contraptions, the gleam in his eye when Cinderâs metal toes twitched for the first time as he tweaked wires and screwed joints shut. Perhaps he had trained her as a mechanic...Â
No. It had only been weeks after he collected the princess that the plague had claimed him. Had Garan blamed her for catching the disease? Did he blame Logan?Â
He turned a corner, and there Garan stood.Â
His stomach climbed up to his throat. It was him. He was the one who had been stalking him across the Commonwealth. Garan stared at him, eyes unblinking and bloodshot. His arms were ringed with bruises, fingers blue and shrivelled. Green foam spluttered from his lips.Â
âLogan,â he growled, clear all the way across the lane. âCome here.âÂ
Logan turned and bolted.Â
Startled pedestrians jumped out of his way as he charged past, clutching their bags to their chests. Mothers tore their children off the path.Â
Soon, visions were everywhere. Sage Darnel slithering out of a booth and grabbing him by the throat. His roommateâs corpse writhing on the ground, crying out, cursing him. He was already expecting Dr Eliotâs bloody appearance. Though she taunted him, he was familiar with this vision. Â
Visions. Thatâs all they were. Unreal. Psychotic.Â
The ground swallowed him up. The traffic of the passersby threaded around himâall at once, he knew every single one of them. Thaumaturges. Doctors. Aristocrats. The entire city of Artemisia was here on Earth, at this market, trampling him. His eyes squeezed shut. A hand lifted his chin towards the sky.Â
He squinted painfully up into the sunlight.Â
Queen Levana crouched over him, blood trickling down the tines of her crown and dripping off her lashes.Â
Pebbles dug into his palms as he scampered away, but she made haste to follow. Â
âSir!â came from her mouth, unnaturally earnest from those smirking lips and ravenous eyes. âSir, are you okay?âÂ
âGoâgo away!â he shrieked.Â
âSir, whatâs wrong? Do you need a doctor?â Do you have someone I can comm to get you? Children? A wife?âÂ
Logan scrambled to his feet and barrelled away from the queen.Â
A wife. Yes, he had once almost had a wife. Steady hands calloused from digging into dirt. Teasing brown eyes.Â
NoâŠthe woman he had almost marriedâwhat was her name?âsheâd had blonde hair and grey eyes. Who was he thinking of? Who was he looking for? Â
He was looking forâŠlooking forâŠÂ
âLogan.âÂ
She stood amidst the crowd, ten paces away. Every shouting vendor and sizzling frypan silenced in the void.Â
âMichelle,â he uttered.Â
She was as young as sheâd been when they met. Melting brown eyes. Lips beckoning him.Â
Her smile was warm. âCome on, Logan. Letâs go home.âÂ
People swarmed around him. A woman blocked his view momentarily and once she passed on, Michelle had disappeared.Â
His head whipped around frantically, searching for her in every direction. Her voice was ringing in his ears. âMichelle!â he shouted, blindly crashing into a fruit stand and hobbling away, completely unaware of the surprised gasps and curses chasing him.Â
The visions transformed. Michelleâs redheaded granddaughter peering at him from a booth table. A boy tossing a ball at him, he recognised as the boy in the pictures on Michelleâs wall. The boy who looked so much like his own brother.Â
Twisting and turning through lanes, only spotting glimpses of her hair and smile before theyâd disappear again, his calves finally seized up. He folded over his knees, intaking needy breaths as his eyes scanned around desperately.Â
They landed on a girl.Â
Despite her decent height, she was obviously young. She stood behind a table in a shaded booth, tools splayed out before her. Grease was spotted over her exposed arms and gloves. She was staring in concentration at the body of a woman who lay on her table, limp and dull-eyed. Logan cringed as she reached a hand into the womanâs open stomach. Â
Had he wandered into some illicit part of the market where someone would dissect a person so openly? Â
It wasnât until the girl tilted the body slightly that Logan saw her innards of cogs and wires. The body was an android. One of those escort droids, perhaps.Â
The girl huffed, blowing miscreant hair from her brow, and looked up.Â
At first, she darted her gaze away upon noticing being observed, tugging her left glove higher up her wrist. But then a flash of curiosity caught her face, and she returned to him.Â
Confusion. Something else. Recognition?Â
Logan wondered if she would be able to help him with his search. She looked kind. Trustworthy. He needed help to findâŠÂ
âLogan.âÂ
Michelle smiled down at him. She appeared this time, not as her younger self, but as heâd last seen her. Greying hair, smile lines and jowling more beautiful than ever. The same spirit and open hands, a magnetism drawing him to her.Â
âItâs time to come home, Logan,â she said, eyes twinkling.Â
âNot yet,â he spluttered, âI have to find someone. I have to tellâŠâÂ
She shook her head in amusement, turning and gesturing to him to follow. âYou already found me.âÂ
âIââÂ
She was gone. He couldnât pinpoint the moment she was there and the moment she wasnât, but he knew she had been there. That was she out there somewhere, waiting for him.Â
Sweet, Michelle-flavoured adrenaline pumped through his veins. He always wanted to find her. After nearly forty years, she was still the only one to have truly owned his heart. He needed to find her and tell herâŠÂ
He staggered to his feet. He wasnât supposed to be here. There was nothing for him here. His gaze again caught on the young girl in the booth. Shoulders set in a hesitant confidence. Brown eyesâcautiously curious. Â
His feet willed him away on their own towards the bright sunlight.Â
âLogan,â the voice called again, sweet as a dragon fruit tartlet. One he could almost taste as his dry lips formed around her name. Â
No, he wasnât looking for that girl. He was looking for Michelle.Â
âââ
âI hope youâll meet him someday. Tell him hello for me. Tell him good-bye.âÂ
âââ
Notes
Tu me cherchais? = Were you looking for me?
I am aware that I am delusional and no one else is as invested in them as I am.
Fun bit of impossiblesuitcase trivia--the hair cutting scene is actually a deleted scene from my Cut, Comb, Detangle, Repeat series! I think probably only one person remembers that series đ
Eagle-eyed readers may be able to notice which escort droid Cinder is working on đ