Chapter 964: The Last Chair We Saved
I opened the door.
Luna stood on the threshold in her human shape—barefoot on the penthouse stone, amethyst hair braided over one shoulder, golden eyes steady as late sun on warm rock. She always brings the weather in with her; the air smelled like the first drop before a storm.
"Welcome home," I said.
Her mouth softened. "May I come in?"
"You never have to ask," I answered, and stepped aside.
Five pairs of eyes found her at once.
Rose set her glass down, relief flickering through the practical calm she wears for me. Reika’s hands went still on a dish towel, posture tightening, then easing by will. Cecilia straightened by a quiet centimeter—the way she does when someone she respects enters the room. Rachel’s grin tilted, halfway between I told you so and it’s good to see you. Seraphina didn’t move at all, which is how she shows attention: statue-still, eyes alert.
Luna crossed to the round table and stopped with her hands light at her sides, not claiming more space than we gave her. "Good evening," she said, voice low enough that the room leaned toward her without meaning to.
Rachel broke the spell first, irreverent because she loves me and because teasing keeps houses honest. "Is this the same ’don’t worry’ you told us before?" she asked, friendly lethal. "Because we filed that under ’optimism,’ and here we are."
Cecilia folded her napkin once, then again, lining the corners like evidence. "Your last note contained the phrase ’for a while,’" she said, precise and pointed. "That is not a unit of time I can defend in a hearing."
Seraphina turned an orange segment in her fingers like a small moon. "You told us the sky would hold," she murmured. "It did. The house did not."
Luna took it without flinching. "I said it because I wanted it to be true," she answered simply. "I needed to stand where the ground did not move while I understood what changed." Her gaze touched mine for a heartbeat and returned to them. "That waiting hurt you. I’m sorry."
No one here needed Luna to bow. We respect her because of what she is to me, not because she sits above anyone. Once I would have tried to smooth the moment with explanations. I let them do it their way.
Rachel leaned back, verdict swift. "Apology accepted. Terms: you sit, you eat, and if you leave again you say goodbye with numbers in the sentence."
Cecilia nodded once. "We saved a chair because we chose to," she said. "It would be considerate to sit in it."
Seraphina lifted her orange as a deadpan toast. "And to tell us when you stand up."
Luna’s eyes warmed. "Those are admirable terms." She looked at the empty chair at my right—the one no one had touched all evening. "May I?"
"Please," I said.
She sat. The room’s geometry clicked into place like a door finally closing clean. The little tension that had crept under the table when the bell rang stepped back into the hall and shut the door behind it.
Stella stood so fast her chair squeaked. "Luna!"
Luna turned to her with the expression I’ve only ever seen her wear for two people. "Hello, little star."
"You said you’d be gone ’for a while,’" Stella complained, hands on hips, equal parts scold and relief. "That is not a number."
"It isn’t," Luna agreed gravely. "I will do better."
"Good." Stella’s mouth tried to keep the stern line; it failed and became a grin.
I cleared my throat. "All right," I said, because they deserved clean lines. "Agenda Two: I asked you all here for family first, and then to say this in a room with every chair full. Luna and I need to decide what we are now that the ground under us moved. I missed her. She missed us. We are not hiding that. But we don’t do corners in this house."
Five women measured me, then Luna, then me again. No one judged. They weighed, and they chose.
Rose nodded first—steady, kind, decisive. "You were his bond before any of us had a name in his days," she said to Luna. "There has always been a you-shaped space in this house."
Reika set her palm on the table, open. "You carried him when the rest of us could only build the road," she said, voice even. "We accept what is real."
Cecilia’s gaze softened. "You don’t require our permission," she said. "But you have our consent—on one condition: no secrets that make the rest of us smaller. We share the hard pieces."
Rachel’s grin sharpened. "Translation: welcome to the ridiculous, beautiful group chat. We have rules about memes."
Seraphina looked away and back—her version of surrender. "I am not good at jealousy," she said, factual as weather. "I am good at respect. You have mine."
Luna listened like she was taking measurements for something she planned to build with her hands. "Then I should say something plain," she answered, golden eyes meeting each of theirs in turn before saving me for last. "We have not kissed."
The table paused. Then the same conclusion landed in five different minds and made the same shape.
Cecilia said it first, because blunt is mercy when it’s clean. "Good. That is right."
Rachel nodded immediately. "No corners."
Seraphina’s mouth ticked. "No balcony oaths without a quorum."
Reika let out a breath I hadn’t known she was holding and found my eyes. "Thank you," she said. It wasn’t about permission; it was about trust.
Rose’s smile gentled into challenge. "When you do kiss him," she told Luna, warm and direct, "make it count."
Color rose at the tips of Luna’s ears—more sunrise than blush. "I will."
Stella had been bouncing on the balls of her feet, collecting bravery like pebbles. She took one step forward and stood between Luna and the table. "I have something," she announced.
Luna’s focus narrowed to her like it always does. "Yes, little star?"
Stella squared her shoulders, faced the woman who once knelt so a nervous six-year-old could touch the smooth curve of a qilin horn, and said, clear and small and huge: "Mom."
The word hit Luna like rain on stone—no sound at first, then all at once. She blinked. "Are you sure?"
"I chose," Stella said. "It’s a now word."
Luna bowed her head the fraction that means reverence, not distance. "Then I am honored."
Stella launched like a comet. Luna caught her and folded around her with that careful strength that is half light and half something older. Stella tucked under Luna’s chin and breathed like someone who had put the last piece where it goes.
Across the table, five heads nodded in crisp agreement none of them had rehearsed. It wasn’t ceremony. It was a house acknowledging a thing that was already true.
We did not turn it into a speech. We did not make a new chart. We did what families do when something right lands—we adjusted our bones and kept eating.
Reika slid a glass of water toward Luna with the same quiet efficiency she uses to save my life. "Drink," she said. "You smell like rain and stubbornness."
"Accurate," Luna murmured, accepting it.
Cecilia rotated the salad bowl an absent quarter-turn, caught herself, and smiled. "We’ll expand the breakfast rotation," she said to no one and everyone. "We’ve added another mom with opinions."
Rachel tore a piece of bread and flicked me the larger half. "Congratulations," she said. "On voluntarily making your logistics impossible."
Seraphina speared a roasted carrot, lifted it, and placed it on Luna’s plate without comment. The quietest blessing I’ve ever seen.
Rose tapped the table once, our small signal for speaking for the room. I nodded.
"For the record," she told Luna, "we teased you because we love him—and because you told us not to worry. We were always going to make room. Next time, ask for it sooner."
Luna met her halfway. "I will," she said. "Thank you for holding my space while I forgot how to ask."
Stella wriggled enough to look at all of us with solemn treaty-face. "House rule," she declared. "If you go away ’for a while,’ you have to say a number. Also, you have to come back for pancakes."
"Seconded," Rachel said instantly.
"Carried," Cecilia added.
"Enforced," Seraphina deadpanned.
"Approved," Reika finished, like the motion had been waiting in her pocket all night.
Luna smiled, and this time it reached her eyes. "Understood."
I let myself breathe all the way to the bottom. Agenda Two had arrived on its own feet and found a chair. No corners. No ceremony. Just truth that fit.
"Dessert," I said, because I wanted to keep the room in the easy place now that it had done the brave thing. "Then we can argue about who gets which school drop-offs like civilized people."
"Fruit," Seraphina said, protective of her box.
"Cake," Rachel said, already opening the bread bag like it contained secrets.
"Both," I said, because this is my house and tonight we can afford abundance.
We ate something sweet that didn’t need a name. Stella stayed tucked under Luna’s arm and, when she thought no one was watching, pressed her cheek to Luna’s shoulder with a small, satisfied sigh. Rose and Reika bracketed the two of them like a habit that already existed. Cecilia made a list on her slate titled Breakfast Rotation — Draft and pretended she hadn’t. Rachel negotiated for custody of the group chat’s meme permissions and lost gracefully. Seraphina rearranged the flowers by a single stem and made the room feel finished again.
I opened my mouth to tell them the rest—how the ground under me had changed, what I wanted to fix next, what I missed when Luna was gone—
—and the doorbell chimed once, polite as a butler, slicing the moment cleanly in half.
Every head turned.
I stood, touched Stella’s shoulder as I passed, and went to the door.