Chapter 452
by
XarHD
What's next?
Plans and Preparations
Early afternoon on the day in question, the best-lit corner of the Main Hall had been colonized by the Harem’s least efficient subcommittee. Liesa sat with elbows squared to the table, her hair yanked back in a two-color braid and her phone resting face-down beside a legal pad, on which she’d already written BRIDE LIST at the top in fat capital letters. Next to the legal pad was a blank event timeline, currently labeled with two post-its: one reading “NO STRIPPERS,” the other, in Riley’s handwriting, “UNLIMITED GIN.”
Across from her, Chloe had a mug of something pale and calming, and an array of color-coded index cards she had lifted from somewhere in the Hotel. She was bright-eyed and energetic but stuck in the cycle of spinning every idea into three alternatives, then voting all of them down. Riley, also on the far side of the table, had acquired a formidable stack of napkins, each inscribed with increasingly wild bachelorette party ideas and at least four unfinished poems. Every so often she would use the point of her pen to punctuate a napkin, as if to make the ideas stick.
It was, in short, the kind of strategic planning that would, in the end, yield a bachelorette party involving at least two competitive eating challenges, a scavenger hunt with a mandatory costume component, and possibly an event horizon.
The afternoon sun fell through the high windows in distinct bands, and the air was hazy with the scent of pineapple and distant chlorine. It was the kind of day that was too perfect to waste indoors, but, as Liesa pointed out, wedding logistics waited for no one.
“We can’t do the traditional bachelorette party,” Liesa said, tapping the end of her pen against the first name on her list, “so we have to build something better. Or at least weirder.”
Chloe leaned forward, propping her chin on the heel of her hand. Her eyes, which seemed always to telegraph two simultaneous emotions at any given time, flicked from the timeline to the legal pad, then to the pale sunlight crawling across the table. She tucked a lock of hair behind her ear—an ordinary gesture, but in Chloe’s case, it signaled deep commitment to the moment, as if she was physically smoothing out the situation so her mind could work on it.
“But no actual wedding until after the end of the round, right?”
“Correct,” Riley said, in the same tone she reserved for correcting typographical errors in government directives. She had started to lean into her new role as Bachelorette Party Parliamentarian, and every time she spoke, she paused just long enough for the other two to ready their defenses. “Which means we have one shot to make it good. No one gets blackout drunk until we’ve gone through the full program. That’s the rule, and it’s not just my rule.”
Liesa, who had by now migrated to sitting cross-legged on her chair, grinned in a way that made it clear she saw nothing but opportunity in “one shot to make it good.” She tapped her pen twice against the table, and then said, “We could schedule the blackout for the afterparty, if it’s that important.”
Chloe, who had already begun color-coding the event timeline with highlighters liberated from Mildred's supply, looked up and frowned. “I’m still not convinced anyone is going to want to blackout after.”
“Why? You worried about a hangover?” Liesa asked, half-mocking, half-sincere. “Because I can add a hangover cure segment to the timeline, if that’s a concern.”
Riley, who had for the last five minutes been engaged in a silent duel with Chloe’s mug for precious table real estate, interjected with, “No one is worried about the hangover. We’re worried about the unstructured chaos window that follows blackout. Last time I did this, the chaos window lasted four hours, and when we woke up, the pool was filled with neon ping-pong balls and someone had removed every towel from the rooms.”
Chloe, who had heard this story before but enjoyed the escalation with each retelling, said, “It was not someone. It was you. And you built a fort.”
“I did not build a fort,” Riley said, feigning dignity. “I was constructing a fabric-based security perimeter.”
Liesa laughed, this time so genuinely she drummed the table with her hand. “Point is, if we want to avoid towel-based anarchy, maybe the chaos window should go at the very end.”
Chloe considered this, marking it on the index card, and said, “So the sequence is: party, then blackout, then chaos, then hangover cures.”
Riley, satisfied, nodded. “That’s administrative order. Let’s keep that.”
Another minute passed while Chloe mapped hypothetical activities—each more elaborate than the last—onto her growing stack of index cards. She would write down a possibility, then slide it face-down to the middle of the table, building a deck of options for later discussion. The deck was already half an inch thick and it was not yet 1:30.
Eventually, Chloe looked at the post-its again, then at the bride list. She pursed her lips and said, “I feel like we’re missing someone.” She turned the sheet around for the others to see. On it were five names: Laura, Erin, Claire, Dawn, and Emi. Riley immediately frowned. “There are only five, aren’t there? I feel like I'm missing something.”
Liesa squinted at the sheet, as if expecting another name to materialize if she stared long enough. “Unless someone else proposes. I’m sure Arabella will tell us, if so.”
Chloe nodded again, more vigorously this time, and said, “Unless she thinks it’s funnier not to. Which is entirely possible.”
Liesa said, “Or maybe it’s one of those Schrödinger’s brides situations, where you don’t know who’s actually engaged until the box is opened.”
This sent the group into brief, speculative silence. Each of the three had, at some point, been on the receiving end of Arabella’s manipulations; none doubted that she was capable of springing a hidden engagement on them just for the spectacle.
“Well, I say everyone gets a sash,” Chloe continued, returning to her comfort zone. “Or a tiara.”
“Can I veto tiaras?” Riley asked, already preparing to override the inevitable answer.
“No,” said Liesa, with the confidence of a perennial club president.
“Yes,” said Riley, with the confidence of a constitutional lawyer.
There was a brief but formal deadlock, resolved by Chloe writing SASHES ONLY in block capitals on a new card and placing it atop the deck. “Sashes only, unless Riley changes her mind,” she said, with a smile that was both diplomatic and mischievous.
A brief silence followed, filled by the faint tick of Riley’s pen on a napkin and the distant sound of someone somewhere, breaking a glass. The air in the Banquet Hall had shifted from sun-warmed and lazy to faintly conspiratorial, as if the three of them were plotting a bloodless coup rather than a group wedding event.
“We need to assign jobs for the events,” Riley said, sitting up straighter. “I move that we make Erin the judge for all competitions, and never a participant, for the safety of the group.”
Chloe glanced up, eyebrows raised. “Why? Is she that much of a ringer?”
Riley did not hesitate. “Because the moment she participates in anything, it’s not a party game, it’s a tournament. It’s true. When she got stuck with the paddleboards at the beach day, she organized the next two hours into brackets.”
“I was pretending not to listen that day,” Chloe said, “but I believe you.”
Chloe wrote ERIN = JUDGE in capital letters on her index card, underlined it, and then set it aside like a chess move that closed out a line of attack.
Riley started to say something, but Chloe beat her to the next item on her mental agenda. “What if we add a craft segment? Like, something for the wedding. Centerpieces, maybe. Or bouquets.”
“That sounds like a lot of glue guns,” Liesa said, but not dismissively.
“Also,” said Riley, “what are the odds that Emi will finish six of whatever the project is before anyone else has even decided on their color scheme?”
“She’ll pretend to be modest about it,” Chloe said, “but she will not be modest about it.”
Liesa nodded, already seeing the future: “If we do that, it should go on the schedule after cocktail three, so that by the time anyone cares, we can just assign her to make all the decorations.”
Chloe looked pleased. “That’s delegation. I like it.”
Riley peered at the napkins, then offered, “We should do a communication-by-written-note round. In honor of Claire.”
Liesa considered it, but Chloe cut in, “Claire has been communicating by written note for months. She’d win within the first minute.”
“Exactly,” said Riley, “it would be a demonstration, not a tribute.”
Liesa, who had an eye for ceremonial irony, made a note and then circled it three times. “We could give Claire the scorekeeper role. Only person we can trust to do it accurately and not cheat if she’s losing.”
Chloe commented, “She’s also the only one who will take it seriously.”
Riley snorted. “I’d bet money she has an official-looking scorebook already.”
Liesa, laughing, added: “I’d bet money she has a backup.”
The mood at the table had shifted again, now a blend of genuine affection for the other names on the list and the baseline irreverence that came with planning a group wedding while half the parties involved in the event were still technically competing for the title of bride. Chloe uncapped her highlighter, drew a yellow line across the bottom of her timeline, and said, “If we’re going to do this properly, we should also have a pre-party.”
Riley blinked. “Isn’t that what this is?”
Chloe shook her head. “No, this is the strategy meeting. Pre-party is for emotional preparation. It’s a thing. Look it up.”
Liesa, amused, said, “You just want to wear the sash before the rest of us get to.” Chloe did not deny it.
Another long pause. Outside, a group of Mildreds strolled past, rolling a dessert cart toward the lounge. The sunlight caught the edge of a pitcher and flung a brief rainbow over Liesa’s hair, making her look, for one half-second, like she was made of color and not quite real.
Riley returned to her napkins. “What are we doing about Laura?”
Chloe blinked. “What do you mean?”
“Seating both of her at opposite ends of the table,” Riley said. “So she can ruin our evening from two directions at once. Do we count her as one person or two for the headcount?”
Chloe hesitated. “She’s… one person.”
“But we have to order double, right?” said Riley.
Liesa said, “I don’t think it’s a problem, here.”
Chloe smiled, the kind of smile that happens when you picture something twice and it’s still funny. “She always did eat.”
Riley tapped her napkin, then folded it in half and set it aside. “I’m out of ideas. Dawn?”
Chloe sighed, but not in a way that meant “I’m tired.” More in a way that meant “I have a strong opinion and it’s coming out regardless.” “Dawn only wants good food and enough of it. Oh, and hugs. I’m not sure we need anything else.”
Liesa grinned. “You mean she’s the easiest to please.”
“Not at all,” said Riley. “I think it means we have to do better. But also, she’ll eat anything we put in front of her, so it’s low stakes.”
Liesa laughed. “We could put her in charge of the tasting menu.”
Riley snorted. “I like that.”
They were mid-argument about whether or not pineapple on pizza was an acceptable choice for a bachelorette party (Liesa and Riley strongly supported the “no” option, while Chloe, more concerned with making everyone happy, suggested it would be, but only if accompanied by non-pineapple options), when Emily wandered into the room.
She was carrying two cups of coffee, both black, one in each hand. Her hair was loose today, drifting over her shoulders in a single, elaborate curtain. The sunlight hit the side of her face in a way that made her look like a famous painting lost to history. She paused on the threshold, searching for her place in the scene.
Liesa spotted her and waved her over. “Em! Sit with us!”
Emily gasped, squirming a little, and approached the table, set the coffees down, and slid into a seat, biting her lower lip for a moment. Liesa looked at Emily and asked, “You have ideas for bachelorette parties, Em?”
Emily blinked, caught off-guard by being addressed so directly. “I… don’t know if I’m supposed to be on this committee.”
“Everyone is on the committee,” said Riley. “It’s an all-hands event.”
Emily laughed nervously, tucking a bit of hair behind her ear, which did nothing to lessen the exposure. “What are you planning?”
Chloe slid the bride list and event sheet across the table. “We’re building the world’s first five-bride bachelorette event.”
Emily took a moment to study the list. She frowned, then looked up. “Are you doing one for everyone at once?”
“That’s the plan,” said Liesa. “But we want everyone to feel included.”
Emily hesitated, then traced her finger over the names. “I’m not sure I should be in this group.”
Riley frowned, and one eyebrow shot up. “Why not?”
Emily looked at her hands. “I, um. Proposed to Andy two nights ago.”
The effect on the table was immediate. Liesa’s head snapped up, mouth open. Chloe stared, hands frozen. Riley did not even move, but her eyes got wide. Emily rushed ahead, as if to get the words out before she lost the chance. “It was at the Green Lion, that jazz bar in Manhattan? In the corner booth. And he said yes, so I guess I’m technically—”
Chloe blinked. “Engaged?”
Emily nodded, smiling sheepishly. “Sorry. It was a little impulsive.”
Liesa looked at the bride list, then at Emily, then at the list again. “That makes six.”
Chloe stood up, out of her chair, and hugged Emily, which surprised everyone, not least of all Chloe. “Congratulations,” she whispered, barely audible, but enough for Emily to hear.
Riley set her pen down. “Good job, Em,” she said.
Liesa, holding back tears, took the legal pad, added EMILY at the bottom of the bride list, and underlined it twice.
She looked at Emily, then at the group. “A bride has no business planning her own bachelorette party. Go. Take your coffee and leave this to us.”
Emily, now blushing so hard it nearly matched her hair, squirmed a little on the chair, picked up both coffees, and stood. “Thank you,” she said in a small voice, and left, and the sound of her laughter trailed back as she walked away. The three planners watched her go. Riley sighed. “So, one less helper, huh?”
Chloe grinned. “Let her have the moment.”
Liesa, grinning through the entire next entry, wrote: “EMILY – bonus round: arrange something impossible.” They spent the rest of the afternoon in the sun, hatching plans for a party that none of them quite believed would ever happen, but all of them wanted to.
The terrace was empty but for one man and the distant sound of wind catching at the glass balustrades. Sam let herself out through the wide sliding door and leaned for a moment in the shadow of the awning, considering the view.
Herman was, improbably, standing on the wrong side of the railing—meaning, the outer side—facing the drop with his back to the world and his hands in his pockets. He was not gripping the rail, not leaning against it, just standing on the narrow metal lip as if it were a curb in a Midwestern parking lot. Fifty meters below, the cliff curved away to jungle and, at the farthest visible edge, the turquoise blur of the lagoon.
Sam evaluated the setup, the height, the lack of panic or performative posture. He looked like he might have been waiting for a shuttle bus, not contemplating gravity.
She slid open the door the rest of the way. “You know that’s not OSHA compliant,” she said.
He didn’t turn. “Haven’t found an OSHA inspector on the island yet. You volunteering?”
“Not today,” Sam said, walking up to the railing and resting her forearms on it, eyes forward. For a full minute, neither spoke. Wind slipped under the awning and fluttered at her shirt.
“I’m Sam,” she said.
“I know,” said Herman. “The Guardian.”
Sam blinked. “Uh. More like the Organizer. Where I get to organize a bachelor party for the only man on the island.”
Herman’s mouth curved. “You’ve got your work cut out, then.”
“I figured you’d know the ropes. Word is you’ve been around as long as Anna and Arabella.”
He shrugged, which looked mildly heroic from his angle. “You need something?”
“Two things,” Sam said, holding up a hand with two fingers. “First, how do I send invitations off-island? Second, if I want to throw a party that won’t get us all killed or audited by the gods, who do I talk to?”
Herman rocked slightly on his heels. “Depends who you want to invite.”
She produced a folded note from her back pocket and slid it under the railing, where he caught it with one hand. “I want to keep it small. Laura Black, Tyalangan, Nick Reynolds, Mark Garret, Caleb Ward. I’ve got backup names if any of those get shot down.” She paused, then added, “Plus anyone you think would be fun.”
He opened the paper, ran his eyes down the list, and nodded. “Laura and Tyalangan, I can probably get. Nick and Mark, different situations. Time will be critical. Caleb…” Herman made a face. “You know he’s under heavy supervision? Like, can’t take a piss without written authorization? He’s got an asshole of a Host who also dared to cage one of mine?”
Sam blinked. “His Host's that dangerous?”
“He’s got a Host who’s a pain in the ass,” Herman snorted, “and a habit of not dying when he’s supposed to.”
“That’ll do it,” Sam said. “Just get the message out. I’ll take care of the rest.”
He was quiet for a second. “What are you planning? If I may.”
“Working on it,” said Sam. “I figured I’d start with a normal party and escalate until someone lost a limb or got married by accident. But if you have classic suggestions, I’m listening.”
Herman looked up at the bright sky, eyes narrowed, then said, “Midnight crossroads race. Never fails. Or, if you want a real crowd-pleaser, cattle drive.”
Sam considered this. “We have cows on the island?”
“Not yet,” said Herman.
She made a note of it, mentally. “What about an animal-friendly option?”
He grinned, an expression that looked borrowed from an earlier, meaner era. “Descent to the underworld. Round trip before sunrise. That’s the one you do if you want people talking about it in every season from here to eternity.”
Sam raised an eyebrow. “How literal is ‘underworld’?”
“Exactly as literal as you think,” Herman said, rocking again on his heels. “And easier than it sounds. Just don’t look back at anyone once you’re inside. And no taking back hitchhikers.”
“I’ll take it under advisement,” said Sam.
Another silence, companionable now. She leaned on the rail next to him, not on the outside, but close enough to feel the strange absence of fear that seemed to halo around him.
“Wanna come too?” she asked. “Or are you just running logistics?”
He turned to look at her for the first time, the barest angle, but his smile had the clarity of glass. “Wouldn’t miss it,” Herman said. “In my experience, these things go smoother when someone present knows their way around a crossroads.”
Sam grinned. “You’re in. Just don’t let Andy anywhere near the open flame, or the bar tab.”
“I won’t,” he said. He rocked back, then, and in a single, easy motion stepped over the railing and onto the main deck, both feet hitting the stone like he’d only just remembered the rules of gravity.
Sam clapped once. “Nice landing.”
He inclined his head. “I do my best.”
Sam watched the horizon for a minute, then said, “I’ll send a schedule when it’s set. Be safe out here.”
“Always am,” Herman said, and walked back inside. Sam lingered, thinking. Then, with a final glance at the drop and the promise of chaos, she followed.
It was near 2pm when Laura found Riley waiting at the entry to the Inner Gardens, a paper bag of cookies in one hand and sunglasses hanging crooked from her shirt collar. The heat was lazy, heavy enough that it softened the world, but the sky above was as clear and blue as a summer childhood.
Riley didn’t say anything as Laura approached, just waggled the bag in offering and took the lead along the path, boots scuffing the stone. Laura walked in step, one of her trailing a little behind, the other up front and to the side. She liked walking with Riley, who never commented on the way her footsteps fell, or how her heads turned at exactly the same angle.
They followed the winding path through the garden, past the sun-baked roses and the blue agapanthus that lined the low walls. Up ahead, a Mildred watered potted orchids, the droplets catching the afternoon light and scattering it in short, sharp glints.
“These are new,” said Riley, nodding at the arrangement. “I don’t remember half these plants from last time.”
“I think the garden grows itself,” said Laura. Both voices together, but quiet. “Or Arabella does it at night, maybe. Or Erin. She’s been on a bit of a planting kick lately.”
Riley snorted. “Erin? Yeah, she does everything on a kick.”
They cut left at the split, toward the little amphitheater where, one night last week, a girl in a silver dress had sung for them in a language none of them spoke. Now it was empty but for a few birds bickering over a spilled cup of juice on one of the steps.
The silence between them was old and comfortable. At last, Riley broke it.
“So,” said Riley, “are you really doing the full wedding thing again?”
Laura kept her eyes on the path. “Seems like it. It’ll be nice to see everyone together.”
Riley made a thoughtful noise. “But you already got married,” she said. “To Andy, and by a goddess. At the footbridge. It was a whole production.”
Laura smiled, a tight pull at the corners of both mouths. “That was just for us. And we didn’t quite pick the timing. This is for everyone else. For the family.” She shrugged, one body a beat behind the other. “I think I want to do it this time. All the way. No running.”
They rounded a turn, and the path dropped toward a small pool shaded by willows. The air here was cooler, wet with the smell of green things.
Riley paused at the edge of the pool and tossed a cookie into the water. The fish mobbed it instantly. “Are you inviting anyone? From before, I mean. From home.”
Laura watched the fish for a minute. “I don’t know if guests from outside the show are allowed. But either way, no one left to invite.” She waited, a finger trailing along the willow branch, before adding, “Except maybe my mom. I found her.”
Riley turned, eyes sharp. “You found her? Where?”
“In the Hollow Garden,” said Laura, both voices flat. “She’s… not awake. She… when I died, my **** and my… my father’s **** broke her. But she’s there, with the others. I visit her every day, even if she doesn’t know it.”
Riley sat down hard on the stone edge, the bag of cookies forgotten at her side. “Wait. That means she was a Contestant, once. She was in a harem.” She said it gently, no judgment, just the shock of realization.
Laura nodded. “Yeah. I think so. I’m still piecing it together.”
“And she’s…?”
Laura looked down at her hands, then at the water. “She’s in a state. Catatonic. I wish I could fix it.” A pause, two breaths in stereo. “You know, Claire asked me about her yesterday, and it reminded me that the last thing I ever said to her was that I hated her. I was thirteen. I was mad at Andy, and she just…” Both bodies shrugged, shoulders tight. “I told her I hated her, and then I died.”
Riley’s hands reached out, quick and sure, and squeezed Laura’s wrists, both left wrists at once, the grip strong and not entirely gentle. “You were a kid. That’s not on you. Thirteen is the absolute worst possible age for anything.”
“I know,” said Laura. “But I still think about it. I don’t know if she even hears me when I talk to her now.”
They sat that way, wrists locked, for a minute. The fish picked at crumbs. The sun moved on, tracing the edge of shadow along the stone.
After a long time, it was Riley who spoke. “I never knew my real parents, you know? Not even their names.”
Laura looked up, her expression unreadable. Sandra's refusal to tell Riley the truth burned inside her.
“I don’t even know if they wanted me or just gave me up because it was easy,” Riley said. “I spent years wondering if I was too much, too loud, too difficult, or just… not enough of anything. I made up stories about them, every flavor. Dead, lost, in jail, heroes, losers, scared teenagers, whatever. But nothing ever stuck.” She looked away, eyes fixed on a blue flower half-drowned in the water. “The question never went away.”
Laura didn’t answer, because what was there to say? She just let Riley’s hands keep hold of her, let the silence be what it was.
“When I lost John, and then the baby, I realized… there really wasn’t anyone left. I didn’t have parents to go to, or a brother, or a single fucking person on earth who even shared my face.” Riley’s voice had gone very soft. “It’s not the kind of thing you ever get used to. It just keeps happening, over and over, and every time you lose something, it falls into that hole and never stops falling.”
Laura felt both of her throats tighten, a hard lump working its way up, then down. “You’ve got me now,” she said, and then, more fiercely, “You’ve got family. We’re not perfect, but we’re here.”
Riley squeezed her wrists, then released them, arms falling to her sides. She let out a long, ragged breath, but when she looked up, she was smiling, barely. “I know. It’s just… sometimes it’s hard to believe it won’t go away again.”
They stood. They walked. The path took them past a stretch of low hedges, then down toward the tennis courts and, beyond that, the wild bluff that overlooked the sea.
Riley looked at Laura, a grin starting to spread, then said, “You’re still a weirdo, you know. The two bodies thing. It never stops being strange.”
Laura rolled her eyes, which was a feat when it had to happen in two heads. “I get that a lot.”
“Good,” said Riley. “Don’t change. Or, if you do, change into something even stranger. That’s what I’d want from a sister.”
Laura snorted, loud enough to scare a bird from a branch nearby. “Deal,” she said.
They found a bench under a jacaranda tree, its purple blooms scattered on the ground like confetti from a better party. They sat, bodies close, and looked out over the bay. After a while, Riley spoke again, voice quieter. “You really visit your mom every day?”
Laura nodded. “Every day I can.”
“Tell her you love her,” said Riley. “Even if she can’t hear. Especially then. If I ever found my real mother, that’s what I’d tell her.”
Laura put both hands on Riley’s. “I always do,” she said. They stayed that way, silent, until Laura had to leave.
By late afternoon the Sky Archive had warmed itself to a faint humidity, the crystal-glass walls sighing with condensation where they caught the sun. Claire sat at her usual table, hair still damp from her morning shower, thumb pressed against the throat where her voice used to be. The silence was not unfamiliar; it felt almost like an old coat returned from storage, still shaped to her.
The coupon had expired sometime in the last few minutes. She’d known the exact second: one moment she could say “oof” as she squeezed past a floating stack of books; the next, her vocal cords vibrated nothing but memory. The transition was seamless. There was no pain, not even a click, just a quiet certainty that if she tried to speak, the world would not hear her. She pressed the tip of her thumb to the hollow of her throat and felt nothing change. There was no ache, no pressure. Just a dull certainty that her voice had vanished again, as if it had never been there.
She considered the trade-off with the same precision she’d applied to every choice since arriving. For twenty-four hours she’d had a voice. It had let her say “please,” and “thank you,” and “I love you, too” in the register of her own choosing. She had been able to tell her father what she had never been able to say before, even when she still had a voice to speak with.
Now, silence again. The familiar architecture of gestures and notebooks, the comfort of a routine that never let her down. And the bond: she could feel Andy’s emotional weather, again. Most days, the bond was a constant, like sunlight or gravity. Today she was fiercely aware of it, thrumming in the back of her mind. If she leaned into it, she could almost tell what he was thinking about.
No one in the harem made her muteness feel like a deficit. If anything, they’d adapted to her. The women around her—Erin, Marissa, even Riley—took it as a matter of fact, as if the world had always included a Claire who could not speak and never needed to.
Katherine helped with that. Katherine never spoke either, and managed just fine. She was proof that personhood didn’t require a voice, or maybe that there were ways to be present without ever forcing the air into language.
She turned back to the treatise, the battered book splayed open on the table, and began marking up the passages with her usual economy. This was her task for the afternoon: to summarize every possible edge case, every loophole, every ambiguity that might save Laura from the Edict that now loomed over her.
She’d found two things worth recording.
The first was a semantic detail buried in a commentary on Ereshkigal’s Law. The text did not use “debt,” as Arabella and Anna had described it, but “claim.” The word for the demanded resolution was not “sacrifice,” as she had feared, but “surrender”—a term that in context meant a voluntary relinquishment by someone with “standing.” That last word was underlined in faded blue by some scholar who came before her. Claire read it twice, then traced the footnote.
She had no idea what that meant for Laura, or for any of them, but she recorded it in her notes: Resolution by SURRENDER. See Standing—must be ‘of relation or bond.’
The second find was stranger. She’d been searching the founding documents of the Hotel—originals, not the sanitized public copies—and found a reference to the First Gate. It was not described as a location, but as a “threshold of origin,” a boundary crossed when a being first took on “higher nature.” Once crossed, the threshold didn’t vanish. It became a part of whatever crossed it. The Law, therefore, was not just written in rules, but was inherent in the Host, in the island, in the very matter of the world itself.
Claire let her hand hover over the page. She felt a tingle run up her arm, as if the book itself had noticed her attention. She had not the faintest idea what that meant, but it felt like a clue.
She needed air. She stood, gathered her notebook, and moved to the balcony at the far edge of the Archive. From here, she could see the whole of the island: the curve of the volcano, the pinprick of the Main Resort, the straggle of palms leading down to the sea. What caught her eye, though, was the archipelago beyond the main island—eleven islands of similar size, though completely uninhabited. Unlike the island of The HH, they were dark, a chain of silent witnesses.
She opened her notebook and wrote: Eleven dark islands, one lit. She left a blank line, then flipped back to the morning’s page, where she’d written the Latin root of “claim” and an Ovid quote. She read both together, let them resonate, and then closed the book.
A presence came up beside her. She turned, expecting to see Emily or Marissa, but it was Arabella—backlit by the honey-glass light, arms folded, face unreadable.
Arabella stood at the railing, looking out at the sea. She wore a tailored suit today, charcoal with a flash of pink at the collar, and her shoes were impractical for any surface but marble. She said nothing for a long time, and Claire was content to let the silence hold.
At last, Arabella spoke, her words careful but not slow. “Did you know that every island on this archipelago was once nothing?” Her voice was conversational, but her eyes stayed on the horizon. “Each one is shaped by the Host who claims it. Every contest, every wish, every surrender, leaves a mark. The longer a Host survives, the more their island becomes a reflection of themselves. After a while, it’s difficult to tell where the Host ends and the island begins.”
Claire nodded, watching Arabella’s profile.
“Those eleven.” Arabella’s chin tilted toward the dark archipelago. “They were my brothers and sisters. Each one claimed an island, as I claimed this one. Each one ran their seasons, made their marks, left their impressions in the stone and the water.” She paused. “And then, one by one, they were gone. The island does not mourn. It simply waits, and then it belongs to whoever is left.” Her fingers found the railing. “I have eleven sets of memories that are not mine. Eleven other ways of seeing a sunset. Eleven other different opinions about whether the trade winds come early or late.” Something in her voice had gone very still. “It is a great deal to carry, and there is no one left to carry it with me.”
“In time,” Arabella went on, “the island accretes everything that is lost, and everything that is forgotten, and everything that has no other place to go. When a Host fades, the island goes dark. What they were—their memories, their power, the particular way they held the world—passes to whoever remains.” She paused. “I am what remains.”
Claire looked out at the eleven dark islands, then back at Arabella’s face.
“This is not an error,” Arabella said. “It is simply what islands do.”
Claire waited. Arabella seemed to expect a question, but when none came, she smiled—just a little, like a teacher pleased with a quiet student. “I suppose what I am saying,” she said, “is that if you wish to understand the Law, you should stop looking in the books. Instead, look at what the island preserves. That is where you will find the answer.”
She left it at that, pivoted on her toe, and walked away, her steps whisper-quiet on the stone.
Claire stayed at the railing. She looked down at the water, at the lit island, at the shadow of the Sky Archive itself stretching out across the jungle. She tried to imagine what the island would look like if she were the Host. Would the world be made of rare books and slow, soft mornings, or would it be the absence of these, their memory preserved only in the way the wind sounded through the bamboo?
She made another note in her notebook. Then she closed it, returned to her table, and resumed her search—quiet, steady, unhurried, as if nothing had changed at all.
The 88 Club was barely open, the lights still on their early evening setting—a kind of indigo dusk that made the mirrors glow and the bottles on the bar look like expensive potion ingredients. At the upright piano, pushed into the corner between the stage and the service corridor, Marissa sat with her hands in her lap, watching as Emily tried to master the opening three bars of “Blue in Green.”
The problem, as Marissa had already diagnosed, was Emily’s left hand. It wanted the lower register. It kept floating off the chord voicings and dropping a line of bass, which was not only unnecessary for the arrangement but actively muddled the progression. Marissa had repositioned it twice, gently pressing Emily’s palm back onto the intended keys. Both times, as soon as she let go, the hand drifted, as if seeking comfort in the familiar.
“You’re letting it slip,” Marissa said, so quiet it was almost part of the song. She reached across, slid Emily’s wrist up a half-octave, and then let go again.
Emily nodded, made a face, and played the run again. The first bar was close enough to count, but on the second, her left hand crept back down and she lost the melody entirely. She slumped in defeat, hair falling in a fan over her face and arms.
Norah, at the bar with a tall glass of something dark and sharp, didn’t look up as she said, “You’re rushing the second beat.”
“I’m not,” said Emily. “I’m losing my left hand.”
“Not mutually exclusive,” said Norah, and took another sip.
Marissa waited for Emily to get her breath back, then said, “The rhythm is good. The left hand just needs practice, separately. We can work on the voicing for now.” She kept her own hands on her knees, giving Emily room to try again.
On the sofa opposite the stage, Dawn sat curled with her own drink—some sweet, cloudy thing—watching the lesson with the serene intensity of a patient parent. “It sounds way better than when you started,” she said. The comment drifted across the room like a feather. Neither Marissa nor Emily responded, which didn’t seem to bother her at all.
Emily squared her shoulders and tried again. The first bar was almost clean, the second bar tripped, the third bar ended with her left hand migrating to the very lowest key, landing it with a dull, final thud.
Emily made a strangled sound, lifted both hands off the keys, and said, “Can you just play it? I need to see it again.”
Marissa paused. She glanced once at Norah, who had set her glass down but was pretending to read the liquor menu, and once at Dawn, who was sitting up straighter now. Then Marissa slid onto the bench, rolled her shoulders, and positioned her hands above the keys.
She started slow. Her touch on the piano was light, but her timing was impossibly precise, and the left hand hovered exactly where it needed to be: neither overreaching nor falling behind. After the three bars, she kept going—letting the progression ride out into something longer, a half-melancholy improvisation that drifted across the empty club. There were no mistakes. Her hands moved with certainty, as if the passage had lived in her muscles for years.
Norah set her glass on the bar without looking at it. Dawn uncrossed her legs, then immediately tucked them back up under her, still watching. Emily watched the hands, the fingers, the way the wrists kept everything taut and controlled.
When Marissa finished, her hands stayed on the keys. She looked at Emily, not smiling, and said, “Want to try it again now?”
Norah, her voice level, said, “The moment you stopped playing, my first thought was whether it helped Emily.” She didn’t phrase it as a question or a challenge, just a statement of fact.
Marissa kept her hands on the keys. She didn’t look at Emily, or Norah, or even the piano itself. She was thinking, maybe, about how many days she had left. The show ended in nine or ten days. She was counting them, always, in the background.
Dawn said, to no one in particular, “That was the best part of my afternoon. I’m glad I came.”
Marissa heard it. She let her hands fall to her lap, and didn’t suggest another round. The lesson, for the night, was over.
What's next?
Harem Hotel
A reality show to alter reality
A reality show in which contestants compete for one lucky man or woman's affections, and are changed until they can.
Updated on Jun 12, 2026
by Exarch-of-Sechrima
Created on Jan 9, 2022
by AliC
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