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Her face falls.

“You’re married?” she asks, her voice small.

“Yup,” I reply, popping the “p.”

She looks at me again with that flat expression and her head tilted.

“Is it serious?”

What. The. Actual. Fuck.

“Yes,” I emphasize. “Quite.”

She hums again and says, “That’s too bad.”

In-fucking-deed.

I almost shout with joy when I hear Axel come in with a group of people, most likely the medical team, who are creating a custom outpatient mental health program for Skai. It felt…kinder to have her be in a home setting where she can be free to exist quietly and in peace, rather than in a sterile hospital.

The doctors—a psychiatrist and a psychologist—enter the room. I pull Axel aside while they introduce themselves to Skai.

“‘Sup, chief?” Axel says, rocking on the balls of his feet with a sour straw hanging from the side of his mouth.

“Axel, since this is your grand idea, I need you here with Skai,” I say, giving him a hard look. He rolls his eyes.

“She’s just a kid. Why are you so scared of her?” he murmurs, turning so his back is to my cousin.

“Oh yeah? You real fuckin’ sure about her being ‘just a kid?’” I ask, and Axel lifts an eyebrow, giving me a confused look.

“Whatever, man,” he says with a shrug. Just then, Skai rises to walk across the room with a nurse.

Axel stops her and says, “Hey, I’m Axel. You like playing video games?”

Skai smiles again, but instead of answering him like a normal fucking person, she takes a small step closer to him.

“Iloveplaying games, Axel,” she murmurs.

Aaaaaaand, I’m out.

I look past the two of them to see if a nurse or a doctor or any-fucking-body just heard what my sixteen-year-old cousin just said to this grown man. Apparently not.

“Yeeeeeah,” Axel draws out, clearly freaked the fuck out, too. “I’ll send over a console and a few games you might like to play.”

I leave him to handle that shit on his own. Truth is, Skai would never be on my property if Axel hadn’t pitched such a bitch fit. This is his circus to manage until she gets stable and can go off on her own.

I leave the room and head to the other side of the house, where the twins are in their playroom. I watch them from the door for several minutes. Raiden and Tempest sit on matching cushions, both playing a game with gorillas wearing party hats.

“You gotta jump, Rai!” Tempest says, damn near growling.

“Help me! I don’t know how!” he shouts back.

“Ugh! R2 and up, dummy!”

“Hey! I’m not a dummy, dummy!”

Raiden pushes Tempest at that, and before they can get into a real tussle, I step into the room.

“All right, you two. No fighting,” I say.