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Chapter 424 by XarHD XarHD

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Mothers

The new configuration of the world hung over the table, a thing both sorrowful and nearly impossible to hold. For a few breaths, none of them tried to speak. Even Marie, who seemed to live on the edge of questions, was spent.

Andy sat with the aftermath of everything, his mind and body humming with the uneasy voltage that follows a collision. Every organ in him, it seemed, was trying to figure out how to work again in this new topology: every story he’d internalized about himself, every theory about what bound him to this place, was now a different shape. The cruelty of it, the way it all looped, the bitter grace notes of hope that kept ringing even after the worst things had been named—he let it all settle, crowding the small office with the weight of a history that had never belonged to him but was now his to hold. He felt the strange intimacy of the moment: not just the pain, but the way pain could be made beautiful when it was shared, the possibility that the game itself—whatever cosmic engine drove it—might have wanted to heal something, or at least draw an honest boundary around the wounds so they could not bleed forever.

The question he’d carried since the first night in the Hotel finally rose up, insistent and clear, refusing to be drowned by sorrow or fear. It felt less like curiosity, more like a rail driven through the center of him: the need to know whether this was ever about him at all, or if he’d only ever been a stepping stone for someone else’s fate.

He waited. The others waited too, their silence a living thing. The question circled. No one else seemed able, or willing, to speak.

So Andy found his voice, cleared a throat that was still raw from watching Laura cry, and said, “Was I picked because I could do this, or was it always supposed to be about her?”

He tried to keep the pride out of it—tried to make it clinical, almost, another datum in a universe of raw nerves and impossible choices. But the room felt it: the yearning in the words, the way even Laura (both bodies) seemed to turn toward him, as if she, too, wanted to know what the point of all this had been. Whether love could be redemptive, or if it was just another lever for the machine to pull.

Arabella didn’t answer right away. She studied her hands—nails immaculate even after so many hours of confession—then lifted her eyes to the ceiling as if the answer might be inscribed there, written in a language only Hosts could read. Her silence was not the calculated pause of someone managing a scene, but the true, gnawing uncertainty of a person who had held this secret for so long it was now fused to her bones.

When she answered, it was with a small voice Andy had never heard from her, the voice of someone who had been alive too long and failed many times at kindness. “Both,” she said.

Andy felt the word slide through him. There was a moment where the world seemed to hesitate, as if unsure whether to break apart or knit back together.

Arabella went on, the words gathering gravity as they came: “You are a statistical outlier, Andy. I don’t mean only in the usual metrics, but in the shape of your soul. Of all the billions—” she smiled, not kindly but not unkindly, “—and there are billions, over centuries of this show—less than ten thousand have even come close to what you did here. Most break before they build. Most Masters become their worst selves. You didn’t. The configuration of your harem, the way you held together even when you were sure you’d lost everything, the way you kept loving Laura even after she was gone—no algorithm could have designed you better.” Arabella’s eyes sought his, and for a heartbeat the mask of Host fell away. There was only a woman, tired and old and heavy with her own wreckage. “But Laura was always going to be a haunt in this place. She was conceived and born here. Her soul was already so tangled that none of the usual tricks—the earmarking, the ‘easy resurrection’ that so many other seasons pull—none of that would work. She was unreachable, Andy. Except for you. No one else could have crossed over, no one else could have survived it. Only you.”

She leaned back, breathing out through her nose. Her hands were flat against the table. “The Producers aren’t sentimental. They want stories that spiral, stories that take in all the old hurts and wring something new from them. The idea of you returning—the impossible reunion, the doomed lover made whole—it was irresistible to them. There were other reasons, but none of them matter now. For sixteen years, I cultivated the rose that would serve as the focus of your return, Laura. By the time my final season was upon me, I was as ready as I could be. One last chance to set things right, or at least… to stop the cycle from repeating.” She looked at Andy. “You, and the women you brought with you—this was the only way to bring Laura back, and keep the promise I had made Sarah. And even then, I was not certain it would work.”

Andy heard the words but did not, for a long while, understand their shape. He wanted to say something—he wanted, desperately, for there to be a clever response, a joke, even a scream—but his body wouldn’t permit it. He was stuck watching the seam of the table, the tiny misalignment in the wood, as if it was the only stable thing in a room full of stories that didn’t want to fit together.

Arabella spoke again, softly. “It was never about making you a pawn, or a prop. It was about finding the one person who had loved Laura enough to carry her soul even after her ****. The only person who was bound so tightly to her that he would never be complete without her. I chose you because you needed this, Andy, and you were the only one who might bring her back, in the end. And you were perfect for this role, either way. You would probably have been chosen, even if Laura had not died.”

There was a small, pained sound. Andy realized it was him. He pressed the side of his hand against the table, grounding himself, then looked up at the women around him: Marie, solemn and watchful, her hands folded like she was praying for someone else; Laura, doubled and silent, both sets of eyes shining with a kind of awe, or terror, or possibly both; and Arabella, stripped of every Hostly affectation, waiting for him to answer.

Andy tried to find a way to hold it all, the praise and the doom and the fact that his own pain had been both the spark and the fuel for the story. He tried to see himself the way Arabella saw him, or the way Laura did, and found that he couldn’t. He didn’t have the right vantage.

He said, eventually, “I don’t know if that makes it better or worse.”

Arabella’s eyes were green and so sad. “I don’t expect you to.”

A beat passed. The clock on the wall ticked twice.

Laura, who had been a statue through the whole exchange, reached out with her left hand. The movement was soft but resolute, and when she found Andy’s hand on the table, she slid her fingers over his and squeezed. The pressure of it was different from any touch he’d known from her before: not need, not nostalgia, but solidarity. The soul bond—whatever it was—carried a kind of pressure, a silent reassurance, the confirmation that two people who had spent a lifetime apart had always meant to be rejoined.

Andy let her hold him, just for the moment, and didn’t say a word.


When the silence had stretched just long enough for the sharp edges to dull, Andy found himself staring at the veins in the woodgrain of Arabella’s conference table. They fanned outward from a single knot, like everything in the world could be traced back to a center if you were persistent enough. It was a comfort, and also a dare.

He cleared his throat. “There’s something else I need to ask.” He lifted his gaze, not to Arabella, but to Marie. Both versions of Laura turned their heads in sync, as if to underscore the gravity.

Marie’s mouth was set, but her hands had relaxed fractionally. “Go ahead,” she said, and the way she said it sounded like she’d already guessed the question and was bracing for the answer.

Andy inhaled, then let the air out slow. “Earlier—when we walked through the Garden—I think I saw her.” He didn’t need to say the name; they all knew who her was. “I didn’t recognize her at first. I only saw a picture of her, before. But I think it was Sandra.”

Arabella nodded, as if this were the only possible way the day could have gone. “She’s in the Garden,” she said. “She prefers it here. She spends most days out in the sun, near the big sycamore in the south meadow. She doesn’t come in, unless she’s cold or hungry. But she’s content, in her way.”

Marie didn’t speak, but Andy saw her jaw shift, a tic of emotion she wasn’t ready to name. He pressed on, as gently as he could. “Does she know?” He didn’t need to say what.

Arabella shook her head, a small, precise movement. “No.” There was no judgement in her voice, only the calm of someone who had watched the same scene play out a thousand times. Her tone suggested that Sandra’s decision was out of pain, rather than indifference. “She never asked for more details. I doubt she could have imagined…” Here Arabella’s gaze flicked to Laura, both faces, then to Andy. “She does not know her daughter is here.”

Andy nodded, felt the pieces rearrange inside him, then turned to Marie. “She deserves to know. And Riley, too. But it has to come from someone she trusts.”

Marie closed her eyes for a second, then opened them. The effect was like seeing the steel frame inside a woman whose entire life had depended on never letting the world see her shake. “I’ll do it,” she said. “Sandra needs to decide if she’s willing to see her.”

Arabella nodded, approving the plan with a single lift of her chin. “Sandra first, then Riley. Only if Sandra agrees.”

It was the right thing, and Andy said so, softly. The room’s tension loosened by a notch. He wanted to ask something else, but wasn’t sure if it would be welcome. He waited, then said, “What about Myra?”

Marie’s mask almost slipped at that. For a moment, Andy saw the child behind the lines of her face, the lostness, the hope. “I haven’t… I would want to, more than anything. But I’m not sure she’d want to see me. I gave her up.” The words came out rough, almost ugly, as if they had to scrape their way through her before they could exist. “I didn’t even get to say goodbye, not really. Greg—” She stopped, mouth twisting. “I wanted her to have a better life than I could give her, but she probably hates me.”

Andy looked at her, then at both of Laura, then back. “I don’t think she’d hate you.” He remembered the way Myra spoke about her biological mother—the longing, the persistent ache of not knowing. “She’s talked about it. Wanting to find her parents. Even after everything. I think… I think knowing you’re here would make her happy.”

Marie made a sound, something between a laugh and a sob. “I wouldn’t know what to say. What do you say to a daughter you left because you thought she’d be safer in the world, and instead…” Her hands flexed on the table, knuckles gone white. “I’m ashamed. That I didn’t fight harder. That I let her go.”

Andy wanted to find the right words, but they wouldn’t come. Instead, he waited, and let the moment have its way. Laura spoke next, both voices together, softer than he’d ever heard them. “Greg caused so much misery. I can’t call him ‘my father’ anymore. But if there’s any chance of healing the smallest piece of that—of making anything better, even a tiny bit—I think we should try.”

Marie looked at her then, really looked, and Andy saw a tremor pass through her. She reached out a hand across the table, not quite sure if it would be accepted, but Laura’s left body took it. Then the right one did, too. It was awkward, but Marie didn’t let go. Instead, she stood, and both Lauras stood, and for the first time that day, it wasn’t Andy doing the holding. Laura stepped forward, hugged Marie, both bodies wrapped around her aunt, and said, “I’m sorry for what you all went through.” The words came out strong, and Marie broke.

She sobbed, hard, shoulders shaking. Laura held her, and for a moment, Andy didn’t move, because it felt like the most private thing in the world, and to interfere would be a violation.

But then Marie beckoned to him with one arm, and he went, and she pulled him in alongside Laura. He held them both, and they all shook together.

After a while, Marie let go. She wiped her face with her forearm and tried to find her dignity, but gave up and just smiled at Laura. “You look so much like her, you know. Sarah. The way she used to look at me when she’d made up her mind and wouldn’t let go.” Her voice steadied. “I was always jealous of that. Her stubbornness. Her gravity. I hope it’s a comfort, knowing it runs in the family.”

Laura made a sound like a laugh, but both bodies at once, and it was so real Andy wanted to cry. “I always hoped I got the good parts,” she said. “Never sure which they were.”

Marie let go of Andy, but held Laura’s hand a moment longer. Then she turned to Andy. “She always liked you, you know. My sister. Even when you and Laura were little. She was grateful for the love you and your parents showed Laura. Sarah hoped you and Laura would be together, in the end.” She looked at Andy, really looked, and said, “I’m glad you never changed. Even this place couldn’t do it. And…” She swallowed, looking at Laura with eyes filled with tears, “thank you for bringing back my niece.”

Andy felt something catch in his throat. “It wasn’t just me. I never would have made it without Arabella, or the others. Or Myra, or Riley.”

Marie nodded, as if this were the only answer that made sense. “Thank you for bringing her back,” she repeated, and pulled him into another hug, this one less **** and more grateful. She looked at Laura, then at Andy, and said, “If Myra will see me, even just once—I’d like to hold her. Just for a moment. And I want to say I’m sorry.”

“We’ll make it happen,” Andy said, and both of Laura nodded.

“It might take a few days,” Laura said. “There’s a lot to process.”

Marie smiled, wiped her face again, and said, “I’m not going anywhere.”

They sat down again, the tension bled out of the air, replaced by a fragile, raw hope. Arabella watched, hands in her lap, and when Andy glanced her way, she nodded. Not that things were fixed—but that, maybe, they could be.


Arabella led them out through a side door into the blue-and-gold light of the Hollow Garden, her pace purposeful but not rushed. Andy followed, keeping both Lauras just behind him, unsure if it was to shield them or to let them decide their own pace. The air outside felt several degrees warmer, the sunlight so thick and yellow it made everything look hyperreal, every flower and blade of moss outlined in its own little halo.

They walked for a time, following a curve of the path that ducked beneath the overhang of a willow and through a scatter of wildflowers Andy couldn’t name. Ahead, near the sunniest spot in the hollow, was a wide patch of grass ringed by stone. In its center lay Sandra.

He had seen her earlier—briefly, at a distance—and the memory hadn’t prepared him for the full impact of her transformation. If there was any humanity left in her body, it was secondary to the animal: her torso was a little longer, more barrel-chested. She was naked, other than for a simple leather collar. Her face resembled Riley’s, and the hair, even though it was cut short, was the same russet color as Riley’s hair before her transformation. Sandra’s dog ears were large, floppy, expressive. Her paws, if you could call them that, had lost all but the faintest suggestion of fingers; her hind legs were bent, muscled. Her tail, heavy and lush, was curled behind her like a question mark.

But her eyes were as human as any Andy had ever met. Bright yellow, yes, but deep—hollowed by memory, set with the kind of intelligence that understood exactly how much it had lost. She was lying with her back in the grass, the way a dog will when it feels safe, her eyes half-lidded in the sun.

She knew they were coming before they made a sound. At twenty feet, her ears went rigid. At ten, her whole body tensed, a current passing from tail to face, and she rolled in one smooth motion from her back to her haunches, then sat up, arms across her chest, head cocked. It was a posture halfway between “don’t hurt me” and “make your move.”

Marie was the first to approach. She crouched beside Sandra, arms braced on her knees. “Hey, San,” she said, quietly, as if greeting a sleeping baby. “Got some company.”

Sandra’s eyes cut to Marie, then Andy, then flicked instantly back to Marie, as if to say: Explain.

Marie let the silence build a moment. “You remember Andy Cooper?”

Sandra studied him, and Andy felt the weight of that stare. He saw, in a single sweep, the recognition, the sorrow, the half-smile of someone who’d once watched him from a distance and wondered what might become of him.

He said, softly, “It’s good to meet you, Sandra.”

Sandra’s ears flattened and she made a sound somewhere between a snort and a laugh. It was neither friendly nor hostile. If anything, it was resignation.

Marie let her hand rest on Sandra’s shoulder, not petting, just anchoring. “That’s not all.” She jerked her head behind her. “These two? This is Laura.”

Sandra’s eyes widened, and for a moment she looked straight at Andy, searching his face for the punchline. When it didn’t come, she turned, very slowly, to look at both of Laura. Her whole body froze. If Andy had seen a photograph of this, he would have sworn time itself had stopped: every muscle locked, every hair on her body spiked in the same direction. He knew, without needing to be told, that Sandra had been there the day Laura died. That she’d seen the water, the panic, the absence.

Both of Laura’s bodies stood, hands at their sides, faces open. Andy could feel the fear and the ache radiating off her, but he could also see the want—to be seen, to be believed, to exist.

Sandra’s ears quivered, then laid flat. Her breathing accelerated, then slowed, then stopped altogether. Her eyes said: Don’t do this to me. Marie kept her hand on Sandra’s shoulder the whole time, not moving, not pushing.

When Sandra finally moved, it was to shake her head. Slowly, then faster. Her eyes stayed on the two Lauras, but her face had closed. “No,” she said. “No. Laura’s dead. I was there.”

“I know,” Marie said.

“I saw them fish her out of the water.”

“I know, San. I did too.”

“So what is this?” Sandra’s voice cracked on the last word, and her ears went rigid. “What are you doing to me?”

Marie let the silence hold a beat. “I said the same thing,” she said. “Word for word, almost. I didn’t believe it either.” She glanced at Arabella, something passing between them. “Arabella confirmed it. She’s the one who made it possible.”

Sandra’s eyes cut to Arabella, sharp and suspicious.

Arabella met the stare without flinching. “Andy opened the way,” she said, simply. “He and the women in his season. They made it possible. He went in and found her, and he brought her back.”

Sandra turned back to Laura’s bodies, and this time she didn’t look away. The stillness in her face cracked—not all at once, but in pieces, the way ice goes in spring. Her jaw loosened. Her ears came forward, trembling. She made a sound, low and involuntary, from somewhere deep in her chest. Her tail went still.

When Sandra finally moved, it was to lean her head into Marie’s side. She shuddered, just once, a full-body tremor, and Andy thought she might howl. But instead she let out a long, low breath, eyes closed. Marie stroked her back, light and slow.

A minute passed, maybe two. Sandra opened her eyes and for the first time looked directly at Laura. “You’re really here?” she whispered.

Both Lauras nodded. “I am.”

Sandra made a sound that might have been laughter, if it wasn’t so ragged. “I thought I’d see a ghost, if I saw anything.”

“You’re not seeing things,” said Laura, and for the first time, Andy noticed she was trembling. “Aunt.”

Sandra kept staring, as if some part of her mind refused to believe it. But after a few seconds, she relaxed her jaw, the wild tension draining away. “You look good,” she said, and there was a complicated affection in her voice.

Laura said, “You were family to me.”

Sandra’s mouth moved, as if trying out the taste of the word, then her ears perked forward. “Family,” she echoed. “Yeah.”

She was quiet for a moment. Her tail moved, just once, a slow sweep across the grass. Her eyes stayed on Laura — both of her — with the particular stillness of someone who has already decided to believe something impossible and is now waiting for the rest of themselves to catch up. Then she exhaled, long and low, and some last tension went out of her shoulders. “Okay,” she said, to no one in particular. Then she looked at Marie. “Why is she doubled?”

Marie grinned. “Long story,” she said. “Ask Andy later.”

A beat passed. Then Sandra said, “Why are you really here?”

Marie shifted, more serious now. “I need to tell you something I found out. You know how the seasons keep running, upstairs? There’s a new one now. Andy’s the Master there.” She hesitated, then looked at Andy. “You want to tell her, or should I?”

Andy took a deep breath. “Your daughter is here,” he said. “Riley. She’s here. She’s part of my harem.”

Sandra’s stillness changed. The earlier freeze had been shock; this was more like the stillness of a statue. Not even a muscle twitched.

Marie, ever steady, rubbed her shoulder. “She doesn’t know. Not about you, not about the past. She’s happy, San. She’s good.”

Sandra stared at the ground, then at Andy. “You’re sure?”

He nodded. “She’s…” He hesitated, not sure how to condense all that Riley was. “She’s everything you’d want her to be. Smart. Tough. She’s been through a lot, she’s lost a lot, but she’s making a life here.”

For a second, Andy thought Sandra would collapse. Instead, she sat up straighter. “Good. Good. You don’t tell her,” Sandra said, and the tone left no room for argument. “She doesn’t come here. Not until I say.”

Marie nodded, not surprised. “Okay.”

Andy didn’t push, though he wanted to. He looked at Sandra, and for a split second, saw not the dog-woman but the mother, the fighter, the woman who had lost more than he could imagine.

Marie tried, anyway. “If you ever want to see her, we can—”

Sandra bared her teeth, just a flash, then said, “Not until I’m ready.” She looked at her own body, the paws, the tail, the four-legged stance. “This isn’t how a daughter should see her mother. Especially not her.” Her voice shook, but she mastered it.

Marie squeezed her shoulder, then stood. “I get it,” she said. “You decide when, okay?”

Sandra nodded, and for a moment, she seemed at peace. “Thank you for telling me,” she said, and she didn’t look at Andy or Laura when she said it, but the words reached them anyway.

They stood in a ring around her, and Andy felt the old pattern: the family, not as it should have been, but as it had become, reconfigured by years of absence and loss.


The walk away from Sandra’s patch of grass was not so much a retreat as a slow bleed, each of them leaking emotion into the air behind them, trailing a fog of what couldn’t be said. Marie took the lead now, with both of Laura just behind, her strides matched perfectly. Andy found himself falling into step with Arabella, the Host’s shadow stitched to his own by the slanting sunlight. No one spoke, and for a while the only sound was the thump of their feet on the moss, and the faint rhythmic hush of the willow leaves scraping against each other in the wind. It was time, finally, to see Sarah.

He tried to analyze the silence, to figure out what it was made of. Not the shock and rupture of the last one—this was heavier, not just sad but unresolved, unfinished. It was the silence of aftermath, the kind that sat on your chest and made each breath come harder than it should. Andy thought of funerals, and of hospital waiting rooms, and of all the moments in his life when he pretended to be more intact than he actually was.

Marie’s shoulders were so high now that Andy was sure she’d wake up with knots the size of walnuts at her neck. She kept glancing ahead, as if counting the number of turns left before they reached their destination. Laura’s two bodies followed her with an intentness that was almost military. Her faces, when Andy risked a look, were set and pale, the lines of their lips compressed to a near-flatness. She didn’t talk, didn’t reach for him, but there was a pulse coming off her that said: I need you to hold the world together for just a few minutes more.

Arabella’s pace was steady, but her gaze was not on the path or on the flowers lining it. Instead, she looked straight ahead, unblinking, as if there was nothing on earth that could surprise her anymore. After maybe a hundred feet, she turned her head the slightest bit toward Andy, and in a voice so quiet it could have been the start of a thought rather than a speech, she said, “It’s not too late to turn around, you know.”

He almost snorted, but the impulse fizzled out. “Isn’t that always the trick?” Andy said. “You can always turn around, but the only thing waiting is what you left behind.”

Arabella’s mouth quirked, not a smile but the memory of one. “I should have known you’d see it that way.”

They walked a few more yards, then Andy asked the question that had started burning at his tongue the moment he realized where Marie was leading them. “What should I expect?” He said it flat, no qualifying or apology. “From Sarah. How bad is it, really?”

Arabella didn’t answer right away. She waited, until the noise of Marie and both Lauras moving up the path was enough to mask her response, then said, “She’s not diminished, Andy. Not the way some patients are. It’s not like a candle burning down. It’s more like… someone built a beautiful house, then removed every single piece of furniture, every picture from the walls, every memory of what the house was for. The house is still there, but it’s been empty for a long time.” Arabella’s voice stayed measured, even, as if the words themselves would take on too much weight if she let them get personal. “She was always strong, but she was held together by a single thread. That thread broke sixteen years ago, and Greg spent every day after using what was left for his own benefit. She never got to be a person after that. Only a resource. When she arrived here, we did what we could to help, but…” She paused, then shrugged. “It’s a kindness, I think, that she doesn’t remember. But she doesn’t remember anything except the idea that she disappointed her daughter. That’s not just a thought for her. It’s the entire structure of what’s left.”

Andy closed his eyes for a second, feeling the ache of it in the base of his skull. He wanted to ask if there was anything he could do, anything at all, but the words wouldn’t even form. He’d seen what guilt and trauma could do to a person; he’d seen it in himself, in Erin, in Riley, in all the women upstairs. He couldn’t imagine sixteen years of being punished for a wound that never stopped bleeding.

“Thank you,” he said. It was all he could offer.

Arabella’s steps slowed, as if giving him space to catch up internally. “I owe her that much.”

Up ahead, the path curved gently to the left, tracing the perimeter of the willow glade before cutting back toward a low cluster of buildings Andy hadn’t noticed before. They looked nothing like the rest of the Garden—more like a series of cozy cottages, grown rather than built, the walls covered in ivy and their windows rounded and deep. The light here was different, too. Softer, filtered through layers of green, the kind of light you might find at the bottom of a river on a sunny day. Marie stopped just before the first door, and both of Laura stopped with her. They stood as a group, not speaking, waiting for Andy and Arabella to catch up.

Marie turned and faced them, and in that moment Andy saw her for what she was: the appointed guardian, the one person who was going to open this particular door no matter what waited behind it. She looked at Andy, then both of Laura, then back at Andy.

He nodded, once. He saw the gratitude in Marie’s face before she turned away.

Both of Laura’s bodies walked forward, her steps in perfect time, but with a hesitation that Andy had never seen before. He watched her faces as she approached the door. There was something in her eyes—both sets, blue and burning—that he hadn’t seen since the night Laura came back. Not fear, not hope, but a kind of total focus, the look of a person arriving at a threshold they had needed to cross for most of their life.

He tried to memorize that look. He wanted to hold it in his mind so he wouldn’t forget.

Marie reached for the handle and paused. She looked over her shoulder at Andy, as if checking one last time that he wanted to be part of this. He nodded again. He wanted to be part of everything that came next, no matter what. Laura took a deep breath and merged.

Marie opened the door, and the light from inside was gold and warm, and the smell that came out was like baking bread and orange peel and something even older, the scent of a place where people were allowed to rest.

Andy stepped in after the others, the hush of the world behind him receding, and the next part of the story waiting just on the other side of the open door.

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