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    • I wrap a towel around you before lifting you up and carrying you over to were your mommy is sunbathing.  “you will be able to do swim a lot now little one” 
    • The final peice of chapter 118, pace yourselves lol. Probably my last post b4 next weekend with the work trip. Thank you for all the support and I hope thsi next chapter sparks more interactions and ideas.   Chapter One Hundred & Eighteen: Part Ten The water was black. Not dark.   Black.   The kind of black that had weight. The kind that pressed against his chest and filled his ears and made up and down feel like stories people told before the drowning started.   He kicked. Nothing moved.   Or everything moved and he did not. His arms cut through the water in frantic, useless strokes, fingers clawing toward a surface he could not see. The pressure pushed down on him from every direction, crushing his ribs, packing itself into his throat, folding around his body like something alive.   He could not breathe. He could not call out.   Every sound came from far above and far below at once, warped by distance, bent by water.   “Such a waste of talent.”   The voice slid past him like a cold current. He kicked harder.   “What’s wrong with him?”   Another voice. Closer. Then gone.   “He’s never been the same since his mother passed away.”   His chest seized.   No. No. Not that.   He forced his arms upward, dragging them through the weight, but the black water thickened around him. It did not want him dead exactly. It wanted him quiet.   “He’s a tough kid. He’ll get over it in no time.”   The words struck like hands pushing his head under. He thrashed. Bubbles tore from his mouth.   “Still wetting his pants? It’s been three years. He should have grown out of that by now.”   Shame opened beneath him like a second ocean. He sank half a foot. Maybe more. His legs kicked wildly. He had to get up. Had to get out. Had to become big enough, fast enough, normal enough, finished enough that the voices would stop naming him as something broken.   “Its alright, buddy. A new school, new film set. You’re gonna make even more friends.”   Daddy’s voice. Younger. Hopeful. Trying so hard the hope sounded almost like apology. He reached toward it. The water pulled it away.   “Sorry, pal, you can’t come. That’s why I got you a sitter.”   The pressure tightened. His lungs burned. He saw a doorway closing. A car leaving. A house too large around him. Then another voice cut through the black.   Sharper. Older. Crueler because it had never been meant for him to hear.   “Bryan, he’s a grown-ass man-child. He needs to move out after graduation. We need this to be about us.”   The sentence hooked under his ribs. Dragged. His hands opened. For one second, he stopped swimming. The abyss accepted him immediately.   Down. Down. Down.   Then something whispered from beneath him. Not one of the old voices. Softer. Closer. Almost kind.   “Stop.”   The word wrapped around his ankle like a ribbon.   “Stop fighting.”   His arms trembled in the water.   “Just sink.”   The whisper came from everywhere now. Warm. Patient. Loving in a way that frightened him more than anger.   “Let yourself go and sink into the cuddles and crinkles.”   His body ached. His lungs screamed.   “It’s easy.”   The darkness below him softened & beckoned. Not black now.   Pastel.   Hands smoothing his hair.   “No more fighting.”   His legs slowed. The water became warmer.   “Just let go…”   He wanted to. God help him, he wanted to. He was so tired of kicking. So tired of proving he was not what people saw when they looked too closely. So tired of being told to grow up by people who kept pulling the floor out from under him. The black water opened like arms.   Then—   A light. Small at first.   A thin white blade cutting down through the darkness. His fingers twitched. Another beam followed. Then another. The voices inside them were different.   Lighter. Warmer.   Not pushing him down. Calling him up.   “You must be so proud of your son. What a talent.”   He kicked. Once. Weakly. The light widened.   “Congratulations, you got the role. You’re absolutely going to crush it.”   His heart slammed. The impossible joy of being chosen. He kicked again. Harder.   “What a WIN, buddy! Can you believe that last touchdown? I’m glad we got to see that together.”   Daddy laughing. His body remembered power. Running. Leaping. Dribbling He clawed upward. The surface glimmered above him now, still impossibly far, but visible. His lungs burned so badly the pain became bright.   Then one more voice reached him.   Small. Excited. Full of wonder.   “WOW, this is sooo cool, Paul. You’re a really good finder and my bestest friend ever.”   A child’s voice. Amber’s   He kicked harder. Frantic now. The black water tore at him, whispering again.   “Sink.”   He refused. The surface blazed above him. White. Blinding. Close. He reached. His fingers broke through first. Cold air touched his skin.   Then the white light changed.   It warmed. Shifted. Brightened into yellow. Paul burst through the surface with a desperate gasp. Air slammed into his lungs.   Huge. Painful. Alive.   Water streamed from his eyes. He blinked hard, coughing, reaching for anything solid. The world wavered. Yellow filled his vision.   A face hovered inches above him. Huge blue embroidered eyes. Pink cheeks. Soft brown ossicones. Rounded brown ears. A wide open smile stitched into bright yellow plush. A little tuft of brown hair stood between the horns.   The giraffe wore a puffy white diaper with a tiny embroidered safety pin on the front, its long yellow body sitting upright with brown hooves spread forward as if it had been waiting patiently for him to return.   Long Knight.   The plush giraffe’s face wobbled. Left. Right. Peeked away. Then came back.   “Peek-A-Boo.”   Amber’s face appeared beside it. Her hair still damp from the shower, darker at the ends where it brushed against her cheeks. Her eyes were wide, but she was trying so hard to make them soft. Trying so hard not to show fear that fear trembled beneath the smile anyway.   She lifted Long Knight again, hiding half her face behind the giraffe’s yellow head.   “Where’s Paul?”   The plush dipped.   Amber appeared.   “There he is.”   Her tone was bright.   Too bright at first. Then warmer. More real as she found the rhythm. Paul blinked at her. The room came in pieces. Pastel playpen. Soft mat. Blankets. The television murmured low behind them. A damp discomfort beneath him. The pacifier in his mouth. Amber kneeling close, one hand holding Long Knight, the other hovering near his shoulder as if she wanted to touch him but knew enough to ask with her body first.   “Wet,” he mumbled.   The word came out small around the pacifier. Amber’s smile flickered. Only for an instant. Then she steadied it.   “I know.”   She moved Long Knight closer, making the giraffe nuzzle gently against Paul’s cheek.   “I know, honey.”   The word honey came awkwardly from her mouth, unfamiliar but not false.   “Everything’s gonna be okay.”   Paul’s eyes filled again. Amber saw the tears and leaned a little closer. Not too close. Not crowding. Just enough to become the nearest safe thing. Amber placed Long Knight carefully into his arms. Paul clutched the plush against his bare chest, the giraffe’s bright yellow face turned outward like a shield. Amber’s hand finally settled lightly on his shoulder.   “Okay,” she whispered.   Her own voice trembled, but she kept it low.   “Amber’s gonna help get you nice and dry.”   The zipper of the green corduroy diaper bag sounded too loud. Like it was thunder. A small, ordinary rasp of fabric teeth parting. The sound of something being opened.   The sound of no going back.   Amber knelt inside the pastel playpen with the bag pulled close to her knees, her damp hair falling in thin dark pieces along her cheeks. Her camisole-pink top caught the afternoon light every time she moved. Pink socks tucked beneath her legs. Low-rise jeans creased where she sat too stiffly, like her body had not yet decided whether it belonged here.   She looked scared. Not disgusted. Not cruel. Scared. Trying not to be. That somehow made it worse. Paul clutched Long Knight against his bare chest. The plush giraffe’s bright yellow face pressed under his chin, blue embroidered eyes staring outward like it knew what was happening and had decided smiling was the only defense. Soft brown ossicones. Rounded ears. Brown hooves. Pink cheeks. A ridiculous little white diaper stitched around its middle, complete with a tiny safety pin on the front. Long Knight. His brave giraffe knight. His stupid, soft witness. Paul wanted to throw it across the room.   He wanted to hold it until the seams split. He wanted to cover his waist. He wanted to grab the blanket. He wanted to sit up straight, look Amber dead in the eye, and say the only sentence that mattered.   Stop.   Not small. Not mumbled. Not frightened. Stop. His adult self gathered behind the word. Every version of him that had ever stood under stage lights. Every version that had read The Firm on a porch and argued morality like it could save him. Every version that had danced in a black silk shirt by the inlet with bourbon burning in his blood and freedom almost close enough to touch. Every version that had once wanted Amber to look at him and see a man. He pushed the word toward his mouth. Stop. His lips parted around the pacifier. A sound came out. Not the word. A whimper. Thin. Wet. Humiliatingly small. Amber’s head snapped toward him.   “Hey.”   No. Not hey. Don’t soften. Don’t come closer. Don’t make that face. Paul’s hands twitched. Cover it. Cover yourself. His brain screamed the command with such force it felt physical. His hands rose. For one impossible second, hope flashed. Then his palms missed his waist entirely. One hand flared outward. The other patted Long Knight’s head.   Clumsy. Searching. Wrong.   A plastic ball rolled against his knee, and his fingers grabbed it automatically as though some smaller program inside him had mistaken panic for play.   No.No.No.   He let the ball go. It rolled away with a soft little tap against the playpen wall. Amber saw. Of course she saw. Her face did something careful. Painful. Like she was trying not to let any reaction become a verdict. Paul hated that too. He hated that she was being kind. He needed her to be horrified. Or angry. Or anything that would let adult Paul hate her cleanly. But she was trying. That left him nowhere to put the terror.   “Paul,” she whispered, “I’m going to help, okay?”   No. No, not okay. His mind sharpened until the entire world seemed made of edges. The pastel gates. The damp patch on the mat. The wet weight at his waist. Amber’s hand. Childhood friend. Almost-crush. The girl who had once laughed at his jokes in this very apartment. The girl who had sat across from him and cut him open with words only someone close enough could find. The girl engaged to Marcus. Marcus, who had helped turn his secret into school-wide entertainment. And now Amber was here. Preparing to change his wet diaper. The thought did not enter him.   It detonated.   Adult Paul slammed against the inside of his own body. Move. His body squirmed. Talk. His mouth worked around the pacifier.   “Wet.”   No. Say the whole thing. Say you can change yourself. Say she needs to leave. Say if she remembers this, if you remember this, something between you will die and never come back.   “Am-buh…”   His voice cracked into fragments.   “Wet… diapee…”   The word landed in the room like evidence. Amber went still. Only for a heartbeat. Then she nodded with awful gentleness.   “Yeah.”   No.   “We’re going to get you dry.”   We. The word tightened around his chest. Paul tried to pull back. His hips shifted against the mat. The wet diaper crinkled. The sound was thick. He froze. Amber’s eyes flicked down before she could stop them. Then away. Too fast. Not fast enough. Paul saw it. Saw her seeing him. And something inside him fell so far it stopped making sound.   Even Amber. Even Amber sees it now. She sees me not as Paul Goldhawk. Not the boy who had almost kissed the idea of her once, quietly, shamefully, in the privacy of his own head. Not the friend. Not the rival.   A baby.   A problem wrapped in soft plastic and bright prints so everyone could pretend it was cute. His chest began to heave. Mommy. Daddy. Martina. Harley. Savvy. Mama Kim. Mindy. Did they all see this? Did they all look at him in diapers and decide the fight had been the illness? Did they think this was peace? Did they think he was happier when he stopped trying to be eighteen? Adult Paul’s voice came hard & fast. The prosecutor. The defender. The part of him that had refused every soft name like it was a sentence.   This is not happiness. This is collapse. This is surrender. This is what happens when everyone else gets tired of your dignity taking up space.   Then another voice answered.   Not little Paul. Not the toddler fog humming under the surface with toys and bottles and warm blankets. This voice was newer. Older than little. Softer than adult. Terrible because it did not sound stupid. It sounded tired.   Maybe the fight is what’s killing us.   Adult Paul recoiled. Shut up.   Maybe the diaper is not the enemy every second.   Shut up.   Maybe being little is not the same as being gone.   Stop.   Maybe sometimes it is rest.   Rest? The adult part laughed without humor.   Rest has an exit. Cages don’t.   Then don’t make it a cage.   They will.   Maybe.   They already are.   Maybe they’re just happy when we stop bleeding on the inside.   The thought hit too close. Adult Paul snarled against it.   They like me better small.   Maybe they like you safe.   Safe is not the same as free.   No it’s not.   The softer voice paused. But neither is drowning.   Paul’s breath hitched. Amber moved closer. He felt her before she touched him. The warmth of another person entering the radius of his panic. Her hand hovered near his shoulder.   “Hey. Look at me.”   He could not. If he looked at her, she would become real. If she became real, this would become memory.If this became memory— God. God. No. His body gave another weak squirm. Amber’s hand settled lightly against the center of his chest. Firm. Gentle. Enough to keep him from twisting backward into the wall of the playpen.   “Easy,” she said.   The word trembled. She swallowed, forced her voice lower, borrowed Martina without meaning to.   “Easy, honey. Está bien. No scary, okay? Amber’s right here. I’m gonna help get you dry.”   Adult Paul recoiled from every syllable. His body softened beneath her palm. That betrayal was the worst part. Not the diaper. Not the leak. Not even Amber. The worst part was that the baby talk worked. His nervous system heard what his pride rejected. Soft voice. Steady hand. He whimpered again, smaller this time. Amber’s face tightened as if the sound hurt her.   “I know.”   She looked toward her phone. Nothing. No reply. The black screen lay on the mat near her knee like another closed door. Behind the bedroom door, Martina’s voice continued faintly. Professional. Warm. Busy building a future. Amber stared toward the hallway for one second too long. Paul saw the thought cross her face.   Please come out. Please save me.   He wanted the same thing.  Martina would know what to do. Martina would also do it. That was the problem. Amber took a breath.   “I can do this,” she whispered.   It sounded less like confidence than a dare. Her eyes dropped to his waistband. The jungle-themed footed pants were damp along the seat, the bright print darkened in a spreading shape that made the whole playpen feel suddenly smaller. Paul’s adult mind screamed again.   Cover it.   His hand twitched. Instead of grabbing the blanket, he clapped once. A dull little clap against Long Knight’s soft side. Amber flinched. Paul wanted to die. She reached carefully for the elastic.   “I’m sorry,” she said.   Not dramatic. Not for herself.   “I’m going to be careful.”   His mouth moved. No. Stop. Please.   “Am-buh…”   “I know.”   No, you don’t. You don’t know what this is. You don’t know what it costs to be seen by someone who knew you before.   Amber eased the elastic down. The wet fabric resisted slightly. A soft pull. A shift. The crinkle underneath answered. Paul’s eyes squeezed shut. Darkness. Not enough. He saw the stage. Scout. Jem. Her arms around him after a fall that had only been acting. He saw Amber’s ring on a chain. The pants slid lower. Cool air reached damp skin through layers he wished did not exist. Amber’s hand returned to his chest when he squirmed harder.   “Still,” she whispered.   Then, without meaning to— “Stay still till, baby.”   The word landed.   Baby.   The room snapped white. Amber froze too. Her eyes widened. She heard it. She knew.   “Sorry,” she whispered quickly. “Sorry. Just… hold still for me, okay?”   But adult Paul had already taken the hit. The softer voice inside him murmured: She said it because she was scared.   The adult voice answered: She said it because it fit.   Amber pulled the pants free from his legs. The footed fabric slipped away fully, damp and heavy in one section. Her eyes widened. She tried to control it. She failed. Only for half a second. That half second became eternity. Paul watched shock enter her face and felt himself shrink without moving. The diaper beneath was larger than she expected. Of course it was.   Large. Thick. Swollen.   Sagging slightly from the leak. White plastic no longer abstract. No longer hidden by cute clothes or soft blankets. A fact. A fact around his waist. Amber looked away too fast. Paul saw that too. She grabbed the wet pants by the driest part she could find and tossed them over the pastel gate. They landed outside the playpen with a soft, damp slap. The sound made her close her eyes.   “Okay,” she whispered.   Her right leg bounced. Just once. Then again.   “I can do this.”   Her gaze flicked back to the phone. Still nothing. A different fear crossed her face now. Not only for herself. For Martina. Her mother’s meeting. Her mother’s chance. Her mother finally being seen as more than somebody else’s warm kitchen, somebody else’s extra hands, somebody else’s background love.   Amber swallowed.   She could not interrupt again. Not yet. Not if she could handle this. Not if handling this meant giving her mother twenty more minutes of future. She turned back to the bag and started searching because searching was easier than staring at Paul.   “So,” she said, voice too bright, words tumbling out to cover the silence, “what kind of clothes and adorable diapers did your Mommy and Daddy pack for you, Pauly?”   Paul’s stomach turned.   Mommy and Daddy. Pack for you. Pauly. Each phrase pushed him lower. Amber dug through the corduroy bag. Wipes. Powder. Cream. Plastic disposal bags. A folded shirt. A folded cover. Something thick at the bottom. She pulled it out. The diaper unfolded with a heavy crinkle. Amber stared.   “Oh my Goodness.”   Paul opened his eyes. He saw color. Bright little dinosaurs scattered across the padding. Green. Orange. Yellow. Blue. Cheerful shapes on something that made his adult self want to crawl out of his skin. Amber blinked. Then, despite everything, an almost disbelieving sound escaped her.   “Get out of here.”   Not mocking. Stunned. The kind of startled reaction people had when something was absurdly specific. She turned the diaper slightly. It crinkled again. Paul’s little side stirred. Dinos. No. No, no, no.   The softer inner voice whispered, not cruelly: Dinos are nice.   Adult Paul turned on it. Dinos are for kids.   Maybe we like them.   We don’t.   We did.   When we were six.    Maybe we still do, member the romper at home?   Shut up.   Amber reached into the bag again. Her fingers found the outfit. A royal-blue dinosaur shirt with red trim at the sleeves and neck, covered in bright cartoon dinosaurs. A matching blue cover with the same print, soft and stretchy and humiliatingly coordinated. Her nervousness cracked into a small, helpless giggle.   “A matching outfit.”   She glanced at Paul. He must have looked far away because her smile faded.   “Okay,” she said more softly. “I think we have a winner.”   She held the dinosaur diaper above his face like a clumsy puppet, trying to drag him back into the room.   “Hey.”   Paul blinked. The diaper hovered. A blue dinosaur smiled down at him.   “Time for a dry dino diapee.”   The words came out singsong. Not natural. Practiced from memory. Martina’s rhythm wearing Amber’s voice.   “Dry dino diapee, then a cute dino outfit. All nice and dry.”   Nice and dry. His adult mind clung to the phrase and hated needing it. Amber laid everything out like a surgeon organizing instruments. Wipes. Powder. Booster pad from the side pocket. Fresh dinosaur diaper. Matching shirt. Matching cover. Everything was ready but that meant before he could get clean, Amber would need to change his used diaper. Still on him. Still taped. Still holding the thing Amber had not yet seen. Her hand hovered over the supplies. Her face changed. The bright, borrowed tone disappeared. The girl remained. Eighteen. Terrified. Trying to do something no childhood friend should have to do and no injured young man should have to endure with her. Paul could hear her breathing. His own. The faint TV. Martina’s voice, still behind the bedroom door. A world away. Amber turned back to him.   “I’m going to…”   She did not finish. Could not. Paul knew anyway. No. The clarity returned so violently it hurt. The pastel fog burned off. The soft voice vanished. The little side retreated. Adult Paul stood alone in his own mind. Wide awake. Trapped. Amber’s hand moved toward the first tape.   No. No no no. Not this. Not the actual tape. Not the sound. Not the moment after.   He tried to lift his hands.   Cover. Push. Anything.   His hands fluttered up, useless and shaking, then curled toward Amber’s wrist like a child seeking reassurance. No. No. He turned the motion into a push. It failed before it became one. Amber caught his distress and pressed her palm lightly to his chest again.   “Easy.”   Her fingers trembled against him.   “I’m right here.”   That was the horror. She was right here. She would remember. He would remember. The first tab was under her fingers. Paul screamed inside himself.   Stop. Amber. Please. Don’t do this. Don’t see me. Don’t know this part of me.   Riiiip.   The first tape came loose. The sound tore through the room like fabric ripping off his soul. Paul’s body jerked. Outside, a whimper. Inside, a scream that bent backward on itself until it became light. Amber flinched but did not stop.   “I know, honey,” she whispered, voice breaking around the edges. “I know.”   No, you don’t. You can’t know. You still get to stand up after this and be Amber. I have to be the person you saw.   Her hand moved to the second tab. Paul’s mind scrambled. Images flashed too fast. Savvy’s porch. Mama Kim’s bedroom doorway. Bryan’s proud smile. Lilly’s napkin at his mouth. Harley’s pink hair. Marcus laughing.   No.   He would bargain. With anyone. With anything. He would forgive Marcus publicly. He would apologize to Amber for every cruel word. He would never ask for stage lights again. Just not this. Not Amber seeing him like this.   Riiiip.   The second tape released.   “Halfway, baby,” Amber said softly, trying to comfort him because she did not know the word baby had become a blade. “Halfway. You’re doing so good for me.”   Halfway. Halfway to exposure. Halfway to a memory that would live in Amber’s face even if she promised it wouldn’t. Halfway to the part where he stopped being someone she could ever want to know.   His adult self threw itself at the locked door of his body. Move. Fight. Scream. Bite down. Spit the pacifier out. Say one sentence. Just one.   I am eighteen.   His mouth opened.   “Am-buh…”   A sob caught in the plastic.   “Diapee…”   The humiliation became so complete it almost detached from him. He could not survive this as himself. The thought arrived calm. Factual. Not dramatic. He could not survive this as adult Paul.   The whisper returned.   Soft.Near. Familiar now.   “Just let go.”   A chill went through him. Not from cold. Recognition. The water voice. The sinking voice. The one that offered rest with padded hands. Adult Paul recoiled.   I don’t know how.   Amber reached toward the third tab. Her face pale. Eyes glossy. Still trying. Still kind. Still the wrong person.   Riiiip.   The third tape opened. The room tilted. Paul gasped. The whisper came again.   “Say it.”   His thoughts stumbled. Say what?   “You know.”   No.   “Say you wanna be a baby.”   No. Not that. Not ever.   That sentence was a cliff with no bottom. That sentence was everything he had fought. That sentence belonged to the part of him he hated most because hating it had been the only thing proving he was still himself. Amber’s fingers went to the final tab.   “Last one.”   The world held still. The pastel walls. Long Knight’s stitched smile. The dinosaur diaper waiting open beside him. Amber’s hand. His own wet, exposed helplessness.  Adult Paul’s voice rose to a final, ragged shout.   I CAN’T.   The whisper answered, almost tender.   “Then stop carrying it.” Riiiip.   The fourth tape came free. Amber’s hand moved to the front of the diaper. She was about to fold it back. About to cross the final border. Paul’s adult self stood at the edge of annihilation.   No exits. No strength. No language. No dignity left that did not require pain to preserve.   Inside himself, in the deepest place, where no one could hear and no one could judge and no one could take it back from him because he was already breaking—Paul screamed.     I WANNA BE A BABY.     The world changed. Instantly. Not like fainting. Not like sleep. Like water rising from beneath him. Not black this time. Not cold. Not violent. Pastel water. Warm as bathwater. Blue and yellow and soft green and pink, all of it glowing without a source. It touched his feet first. Then his legs. Then his hips. The shame blurred where it met the water. The panic softened at the edges.   The room dulled.   Amber’s face became light behind ripples. The sound of the television stretched into something musical. The crinkle beneath him became rhythm. Padding became pressure. Pressure became safety. Safety became permission.   No more fighting. No more sentences shattering against the pacifier. No more adult Paul clawing through humiliation with bleeding hands.   The water rose over his chest. His shoulders. His ears. The world muted. Only soft things remained. Long Knight against him. Amber’s hand steady on his chest. Baby talk floating above him like lullaby. All nice and dry. No scary. Good boy. Dino diapee. The words no longer cut. They bobbed gently on the surface.   Paul sank.   Not into darkness.   Into relief.   Into the terrible sweetness of not remembering enough to be ashamed.     Above the water, Amber drew a shaky breath. Her hand gripped the front of the loosened diaper. She began to pull.   “Espera.”   The word entered the room like a hand catching a falling glass. Not shouted. Not panicked. Firm enough to stop time. Amber froze. Martina stood at the edge of the living room. Her face composed, but her breathing slightly quickened from the walk that had almost become a run.   “Wait, honey.”   Spanish and English together. Soft command. Mother voice. Amber’s whole body seemed to collapse without moving. Her shoulders dropped first. Then her jaw. Then the careful bravery holding her face together.   “Oh, thank God.”   It escaped her in one breath.   Small. Broken. Human.   Martina stepped over the playpen wall as if she had done it a hundred times and knelt beside them. Her free hand moved immediately to the front of Paul’s loosened diaper, holding it in place before anything else happened.   Protecting him. Covering him.   Preserving the dignity Amber had not known how to protect because no one had ever taught her what dignity looked like in this kind of moment. The gesture was so quick. So natural. So loving. Amber understood and felt ashamed at the same time. Martina looked at Paul first. Always Paul first. His eyes were hazy now, softened by that distant, little fog. His breath had steadied. Long Knight remained clutched against him. The pacifier moved slowly.   “Está bien, principito,” Martina murmured. “I’m here. Martina’s here.”   Paul blinked at her. The tension in his body eased another inch. Then Martina looked at Amber with nothing but thanks, love and pride. Amber’s face crumpled.   “I just wanted to help.”   Her voice cracked open.   “He needed help.”   “I know.”   “I didn’t know what else to do.”   “I know, mi niña. And you did everything right.”   Martina leaned forward and kissed the top of Amber’s damp hair. The tenderness landed harder than any reprimand.   “I am very proud of you.”   Amber swallowed.   “I was really scared.”   Martina’s hand stayed where it was, holding Paul’s diaper closed, making sure the conversation did not cost him privacy.   “Courage is not when you are not scared.”   Amber looked at her through tears. Martina brushed a thumb along her daughter’s cheek.   “Courage is when you are scared and still gentle.”   She also did not move her protective hand from Paul. Balance. Care in two directions.   Mother of the daughter. Caregiver of the boy.   A woman who understood that love did not become simpler because two people needed her at once.   “You can still help,” Martina said.   Amber wiped her face quickly.   “How?”   “Take his wet things and put them in the wash. The pants too.”   Amber nodded too fast.   “I will change him.”   Amber’s breath loosened fully. Not relief from Paul. Relief from the part she was not ready to carry.   “But if you want,” Martina added, “after he is clean, you can help dress him.”   Amber looked down at the outfit laid beside the supplies. The royal-blue shirt. The matching cover. Bright little dinosaurs everywhere. A small smile crawled across her face as she then looked at Paul. His eyes drifted toward her through the softened fog.   “Am-buh?”   She leaned closer, staying where Martina guided the boundary.   “I’m here.”   Paul blinked slowly.   “Dino?”   Amber’s heart cracked and warmed at the same time. She looked at the outfit. Then back at him. Her smile trembled but held.   “Yeah.”   A breath.   “Dino.”   Martina’s mouth softened.   “See?”   She reached for the wipes Amber handed her.   “One step at a time.”   Amber gathered the wet pants carefully. This time, she kept her face calm.     Martina’s hands moved with the kind of practiced gentleness that did not announce itself as skill. One side. Smooth. Check. The other side. Smooth. Check. Her palm pressed lightly along the front of the clean dinosaur diaper, making sure it sat secure without being too tight. Paul watched from somewhere warm and far away. Martina’s gold hoops swinging gently whenever she leaned over him. Her voice came low, Spanish and English braided together like lullaby.   “Todo listo, principito. All dry now.”   All dry. The words floated down and landed somewhere safe. Paul sucked on his pacifier. Slow. Steady. The wet panic had gone. The sharp parts had gone with it. He knew something had happened. Something big. Something grown-up and terrible, somewhere beyond the pastel water where thoughts lost their edges. But Martina was smiling. The dinosaur diaper was dry and thick and crinkly beneath him. So the world was okay. A shadow crossed the living room entrance. Amber came back. Paul blinked at her.   “Am-buh.”   “Hey,” she said softly.   Martina glanced over her shoulder.   “Come, mi niña. You can help with his shirt.”   Amber hesitated at the playpen wall. Only a breath. Then she stepped over it. Paul watched her kneel beside the dinosaur outfit laid out on the blanket. The shirt was blue. Bright, bright blue. Covered in tiny dinosaurs. Red trim at the collar. Red trim on the sleeves. The matching cover waited beside it, the same cartoon dinosaurs marching across the fabric as if they were all headed somewhere very important. Amber lifted the shirt.   “Okay,” she said, trying to make her voice playful even though her hands were still careful. “Dino time.”   Martina helped him sit up, one steady hand behind his back, the other guiding his arm gently. Amber did the sleeves. One arm. Then the other. She did not rush. She did not laugh. When the shirt got caught briefly near his shoulder, she said, “Oops, dino traffic jam,” and Paul giggled around the pacifier before he realized he was giggling. The sound surprised Amber. It seemed to surprise her in a good way. Martina smiled at them both.   “There. Look at you.”   Amber reached for the matching cover. Paul patted the dinosaur on his shirt.   “Dino.”   “Very handsome dino,” Martina said.   Amber’s smile flickered. Handsome. The word landed somewhere Paul could not quite reach. Then it floated away. Sooner or later the front door opened. Cool evening air slipped into the room. Paul turned his head from inside the playpen. The hall beyond the entryway glowed with apartment-building light. A tall shape filled the doorway, familiar before it became clear. Bryan stepped inside. No sports coat. No tie. Just the vest and shirt from his long day, both loosened now, the polished executive edges softened by exhaustion. His sleeves were rolled at the forearms. His hair looked like he had run his fingers through it too many times.   Daddy.   The word moved through Paul faster than thought. He grabbed the playpen wall. Martina turned sharply, ready to help, but Paul was already pulling himself upright, using the pastel panels like railings. His feet found the mat. Unsteady. But there. His pacifier slipped from his mouth and dangled from the clip on his shirt.   “Daddy!”   The word came sweet. Clear. Sincere. Bryan’s face changed. Whatever he had carried in from the office, the call, the legal documents, the city outside—it broke open at the sound of that one word. He crossed the room in three steps.   “Hey, buddy.”   Paul reached up. Bryan leaned over the playpen wall and gathered him in carefully, then lifted him fully into his arms as if the weight answered a question he had been afraid to ask all day. Paul buried his face against his father’s vest. Bryan held him close. Not too tight. Never too tight around the ribs. But close enough that Paul felt the heartbeat under his father’s shirt.   “I missed you so much,” Bryan whispered into his hair.   Paul clung to him.   “Miss Daddy.”   Bryan closed his eyes. The apartment blurred for a second. Martina turned away politely, but her face softened. Amber stood near the playpen with Paul’s superhero backpack open at her feet, toys spread across the mat in small cheerful evidence of the afternoon. Batman. Long Knight. The yellow truck. Crayons. The zoo coloring book. A red car. A blue car. A few plastic balls that had rolled under the coffee table.   “Come on, Paul,” Amber said gently, holding up the backpack. “Let’s get your stuff packed up.”   Bryan lowered him back to the mat only after Paul was ready. Paul looked at Amber. Then the toys. Then back at Bryan.   “Pack?”   “Yeah,” Amber said. “We gotta make sure Batman doesn’t get left behind.”   Paul immediately crawled toward Batman and tucked him into the backpack with great seriousness. Amber helped. Not doing it for him. Helping him find things. Paul smiled around the pacifier after Bryan slipped it gently back into his mouth. Behind them, Martina touched Bryan’s elbow and drew him a few steps toward the kitchen. Her voice lowered. Paul could not hear every word. Only pieces.   Good boy. Ate well. Played. Slept. Got a little upset. Amber helped. Responds wonderfully to her. Martina switched into Spanish for the part that felt more private.   “En el año nuevo, si todavía necesita ayuda, deberías considerar que Amber me ayude a cuidarlo.”   Bryan looked from Martina to Amber. Paul and Amber were kneeling together now, both reaching for scattered toys. For half a second, the years folded strangely. Not Paul in a playpen. Not Amber engaged. Not diapers or lawsuits or schools or broken trust. Just two people the same age, cleaning up after themselves badly, bumping elbows over a toy car. A childhood version of them trying to come back through the wrong door. Martina continued softly.   “Fue una gran ayuda. Y Paul responde muy bien con ella. Solo si lo necesita.”   “Thank you, Martina.”   “You do not need to thank me.”   “Yes,” Bryan said. “I do.”   He looked at Amber again.   “We’ll talk with Lilly in the new year. All of us. And decside if she wants to help out more if he needs it and chooses it.”   Martina nodded.   “Good.”   Bryan reached down for the bag he had brought with him. Martina’s expression shifted instantly.   “Bryan.”   “What?”   “No.”   “You don’t even know what it is.”   “I know that face.”   Bryan smiled faintly and pulled out two wrapped gifts. One elegant cream box with a red ribbon. One smaller green box with gold paper.   “For you,” he said, offering the larger one to Martina. “And for Amber.”   Martina sighed.   “You shouldn’t have.”   “That seems unlikely.”   “Bryan.”   “Merry Christmas, T.”   The nickname softened her protest. Amber looked up from the backpack.   “For me?”   Bryan held out the smaller box.   “From Lilly, Paul and me.”   Amber stared at it. Something passed through her face. Guilt. Gratitude. The ache of being included by people she had failed and still somehow not lost. She took the gift carefully.   “Thank you.”   Paul watched the exchange, not understanding all of it, but sensing the warmth. Gifts. Christmas. Daddy. Home. The world stayed small enough to hold.     “Open your eyes, baby.” Lilly’s voice. Sweet. Soft. Close. Paul floated in the dark between nap and waking. The car smelled like leather, cold December air, and the faintest trace of Lilly’s perfume when she leaned through the open door.   “Come on, sweetheart,” she cooed. “You’re home now.”   The sky beyond the car was early evening blue, mid-December in Jacksonville, the kind of blue that came after sunset but before true night. The Goldhawk house rose beyond the driveway in soft exterior light, windows glowing warm against the cool air. He was buckled safely in Bryan’s car. Still sleepy. Lilly’s face hovered near the open door, elegant blouse changed now, hair looser, eyes brighter than she was trying to let them be. Paul reached out before he was fully awake.   “Out.”   His fingers opened and closed.   “Out, Mommy. Hug. Mommy’s back.”   Lilly’s breath caught. Then she bent low and gathered him into the awkward angle of a car-door hug, her arms wrapping carefully around his shoulders while he pressed into her.   “I’m right here,” she whispered. “Mommy’s right here.”   Paul held on. Bryan came around the car and waited one second before gently breaking the hug.   “Let’s get him out, Lil.”   Lilly kissed Paul’s hair before pulling back. Bryan unbuckled him with efficient tenderness, one hand supporting his side, the other working the straps free.   “All right, big boy,” Bryan said, scooping him carefully into his arms. “It’s time for yummy din-din and then a movie before beddy-bye.”   Paul rested his head against Bryan’s shoulder.   “Yummy din-din.”   “That’s right.”   Lilly shut the car door behind them. She carried two large paper bags of Chinese food, their tops folded over, steam and garlic and ginger escaping into the cool air. The gourmet kitchen looked softer now. Most of the camera equipment had been cleared away, but traces of the day remained. One softbox folded near the wall. A coiled cable under the counter.A silver reflector leaning against a chair like a forgotten moon.   The marble island was clean again, except for the Chinese takeout cartons opened across it, chopsticks resting on napkins, little plastic cups of sauce arranged near the edge. In the breakfast nook, Bryan sat at one end of the padded banquette. Lilly sat at the other. Paul was nestled between them. Safari bib clipped at his neck. His plastic bottle waited near his hand, filled with juice. The warmth of both parents on either side of him made the world feel like a nest. Bryan held a spoonful of soft rice and tiny cut vegetables.   “Big bite?”   Paul opened his mouth.   Lilly smiled.   “Very good.”   He chewed slowly. Then grabbed a cut-up chicken ball from the sectioned plate in front of him and fed himself, fingers slightly clumsy but determined.   “That one’s yours,” Bryan said. “Good job, buddy.”   Paul smiled. He liked the praise. He did not know whether he was supposed to. He liked it anyway.   Lilly helped him with a piece of tempura vegetable, breaking it smaller first.   “No rush,” she said. “Little bites.”   Dinner moved in pieces. Spoon from Bryan. Bite from Paul. Napkin from Lilly. Juice from the bottle. Sweet-and-sour sauce. Warm rice. Soft laughter. The crinkle beneath him whenever he shifted on the bench. Lilly spoke while she fed him another careful spoonful. Not to him exactly. Not around him either. To the family.   “I talked more with Hillary about the SMG series.”   Bryan looked up. Paul sucked on the bottle, cheeks hollowing slightly around the spout. Lilly brushed a piece of hair from Paul’s forehead.   “I think when Paul gets back to us enough to understand everything, we need to ask him if he wants to move forward.”   The words were soft. Different. Bryan noticed. Paul noticed only the tone. Careful. Lilly continued.   “Not because it would be powerful content.”   She looked down at Paul. Her thumb gently wiped sauce from the corner of his mouth with the edge of the bib.   “Because it would be his story.”   Bryan’s face softened.   “Mindy said something similar.”   “I know.” Lilly played lightly with Paul’s hair as he drank from the bottle. “She said telling one’s story can help give ownership back. And maybe inspiration too. Not in some polished miracle way.”   Her voice tightened.   “I don’t want that.”   Bryan said nothing. Lilly kept going.   “If Paul ever tells it, I want it to normalize recovery. Real recovery. Messy recovery. The kind where some days are backward and some days are sideways and none of that makes the person less worth seeing.”   Paul looked up at her. He did not understand the whole sentence. But he understood her face. Mommy soft. Mommy trying. He released the bottle.   “Mmm?”   Lilly smiled and kissed his forehead.   “Nothing you need to worry about tonight, baby.”   Bryan reached across Paul and touched Lilly’s hand. A small gesture.     The living room had become a cave of blue light. The blinds were drawn. Only the large flat-screen television illuminated the room, flashing color across the expensive couch, the polished coffee table, the bowl beside Lilly that held only a handful of caramel popcorn. Toy Story played across the screen.   Bright. Familiar. Safe.   Paul sat between his parents at first, but slowly, inevitably, his body slid sideways until his head found Bryan’s lap. A soft pillow cushioned him there, and Bryan’s hand rested lightly against his shoulder. Paul wore his baby-blue sleeper now. Soft. Warm. Pacifier clipped. The extra-thick diaper beneath it was impossible not to notice when he shifted, but no one mentioned it. No one made a thing of it. It was simply there. Like the blanket tucked over his legs. Like the wine glasses. Like the popcorn bowl. Bryan wore flannel pajamas in black with warm orange and red tones running through the pattern. Lilly’s were white with deep purples and pinks, elegant even in softness. Each had a glass of red wine. Neither drank quickly. Paul watched Woody and Buzz through half-closed eyes, sucking vigorously on the pacifier whenever the room got quiet. The movie sounds came bright. Space ranger. Cowboy. Laughter.   Then lower voices above him.   Bryan and Lilly. Talking in that adult way that meant serious things were being folded carefully so they would not scare him. Andre. School. Papers. Timing. Paul heard the tones more than the meaning. Bryan’s voice controlled but heavy. Lilly’s quieter, fierce underneath.   A lawsuit.   Paul did not know the word in that state. Only the feeling. Storm far away. His name somewhere inside it. Lilly reached down and stroked his hair.   “I’ll back it,” she said softly.   Bryan’s hand stilled on Paul’s shoulder.   “But when he can understand, he needs to be looped in. Fully. No decisions over him.”   “I agree.”   “No more people deciding the shape of his life because it’s easier than waiting for him to speak.”   The room went quiet except for the movie. Paul sucked harder on the pacifier. Bryan’s voice came low.   “I’m worried what it’ll do to him.”   “I am too.”   “And if we do nothing?”   Lilly looked toward the television, but her eyes were not on the movie.   “I’m worried what that teaches him too.”   Bryan exhaled. Paul felt the breath move through his father’s body. He did not know what they were planning.   The taste of vanillia, honey and warm milk filled Paul’s mouth with each suck of his glass bottle. As Lilly held it while Paul lay in the rail bed, his head turned slightly on the pillow, eyes heavy and unfocused. The nursery was dim. Not dark yet. The mobile above his bed waited still, little shapes suspended in the soft glow of the lamp. Bryan moved near the diaper pail, tying off the used bag with practiced efficiency. The plastic rustled. The lid opened. Closed. The room smelled faintly of baby powder, warm laundry, and the lavender spray Lilly used too much of when she was trying to make a room feel peaceful by force. Paul drank the last of the milk.   Slow. Sleepy.   The bottle tipped higher. Lilly watched his throat move.   “There you go,” she whispered. “Almost done.”   Bryan came to the bedside just as Lilly eased the empty bottle away. Paul’s lips searched once. Lilly replaced the bottle with his pacifier.   “There, sweetheart.”   Bryan leaned down first. Kissed his cheek. Then his forehead.   “Goodnight, buddy.”   Paul’s eyes fluttered.   “Daddy.”   Lilly wound the mobile. A soft mechanical melody began above him, slow and delicate. She leaned down next, kissing his temple, then the bridge of his nose.   “Goodnight, my beautiful boy.”   Paul’s fingers curled around the blanket.   “Mommy.”   “I love you.”   Bryan tucked the edge of the blanket near his side. Lilly checked the monitor. Bryan checked the rail. Neither needed to say they were doing it. They were parents in the choreography of worry. At the door, they looked back once. Paul watched them through closing eyes. The light clicked off. The door pulled almost shut.     The room became dark.   Not completely. A soft nightlight glowed near the dresser. The mobile turned slowly overhead. Breath. Safe. Safe. Safe.   Then— A knock.   Not in the room. In memory. Sharp. Morning-bright. A door opening. Cold air cutting across his face. A delivery driver in a dark jacket holding a square box covered in red-and-white FRAGILE stickers. A sealed envelope taped flat across the top. Black letters.   URGENT / OVERNIGHT DELIVERY   “Have a good one,” the driver said.   “Thanks,” Paul replied automatically.   The door closed. The box sat in his hands. Heavy. Too heavy. The entryway floor beneath him. The envelope set down carefully first. Then the box. Tape pulling. Ribs protesting. A wince. Foam. Bubble wrap. Cardboard flaps opening like a mouth.   Dark wood. Glass. A shadow box. Beautiful. Ceremonial.   Wrong before he knew why.   Bishop’s Gate colors filled his vision. Crimson. Gold. Black. Velvet backing. School crest. And there— The letter award. The one he had wanted for years. Proof. Commitment. Belonging. His breath stopped.   Then his eyes moved. Beside it— A diploma. His diploma. No. Not his. Not like that. Successful Completion of Bishop’s Gate Academy. The words sat behind glass like marble over a grave.   No.   The envelope. His fingers tearing paper too fast. Ribs burning. Letter unfolding. Lines blurring. Crimson and gold pulsing like a wound. Removed. Completed. Best interest.   No. No. No.   The letter shook in his hand.   “Noooooooooooooooooooooooooooo!”   Paul’s eyes snapped open in the dark. The mobile continued turning. His chest heaved. But this time the fog did not close. This time the pastel water split. Adult Paul came up like a body breaking through ice.   Not smooth. Not gentle. Violent enough to hurt.   He sat upright so fast the blanket fell to his waist. The pacifier dropped from his mouth and bounced once against the sleeper before hanging from the clip. His breath came hard. His eyes were wide. Clear. Horrified.   “Holy Fuck.”   The words came out hoarse, adult, stunned. He looked down at himself. The sleeper. The room. His hands. His body. The memory of days missing. His voice rose, not shouting exactly, but sharp enough to cut through the door.   “What the hell happened to me?”   He swung his legs slightly, disoriented, trapped by the rails more psychologically than physically.   “Mom? Dad?”   He was not scared. Not in the little way. He was terrified in the adult way. The way that needed facts. People. Time. Answers.   “Mom! Dad!”   The nursery door opened almost immediately. Bryan came in first, bare feet hitting the floor, pajama shirt half-buttoned wrong, face already awake with fear. Lilly followed a heartbeat later, robe pulled tight over her flannel pajamas, hair loose around her shoulders.   They both stopped.   Paul sat upright in the rail bed. Eyes clear. Mouth free of the pacifier. Body tense. Present. Bryan’s face changed so quickly it almost broke.   “Paul.”   His voice caught.   “Paul, are you— I mean…”   Paul looked at him. Really looked.   “Yeah, Dad.”   The words trembled, but they were his.   “I’m here.”   Bryan crossed the room and reached him at once, lowering the rail with hands that shook. Then he hugged his son. Not little. Not careful in the same way. Still careful of the ribs, always careful, but different now. Father to son. Man to young man. Paul grabbed onto him.   “What happened to me?”   His voice cracked.   “And why is it nighttime?”   Lilly moved to the other side of the bed, one hand covering her mouth for half a second before she climbed in beside him. No hesitation. She slid onto the mattress and wrapped her arms around him from behind, pulling him gently back against her chest like she had these past few weeks when he was little and the world had seemed easier to fix. Lilly pressed her cheek to his hair.   “Oh, sweetheart.”   Paul’s breathing hitched.   “What time is it?”   Bryan looked at Lilly. Lilly looked at Bryan. A whole conversation passed between them without sound. Careful. Careful.   Paul saw it. His stomach tightened.   “What?”   Lilly’s arms held him a little closer.   “Sweetheart,” she said gently, “what time do you think it should be?”   Paul blinked. The question made no sense.   “I don’t know.”   He tried to organize memory. Box. Letter. Frame. No. Then nothing clean.   “I guess… after I got the package from school.”   He swallowed.   “Monday night.”   Bryan’s face tightened. Lilly closed her eyes briefly. Paul felt the shift in both of them.   “What?”   His voice sharpened.   “What day is it?”   Bryan sat on the edge of the bed, one hand still on Paul’s arm.   “There will be enough time to talk later.”   “No.”   “Paul.”   “No, Dad, what day—”   Bryan’s voice broke just enough to stop him.   “Please.”   Paul stared at him. Bryan swallowed.   “There will be enough time. I promise. We’ll tell you everything.”   Lilly’s voice came soft against his ear.   “But right now, we are just happy to have all of you back.”   The words landed strangely. Back. As if he had been gone. Paul looked around the room again. The rail bed. The mobile. The sleeper. The nightlight. The pacifier clipped to his chest.   He wanted to rip it all away. He wanted to demand every missing hour. He wanted to scream until the house gave him a timeline.   But Bryan was holding his arm like he was afraid Paul might disappear if he let go. Lilly was crying silently into his hair. And some part of Paul—adult, awake, terrified—understood that whatever had happened had not only happened to him.   It had happened to them too.   So he breathed. He leaned back into Lilly because he could not hold himself upright and hold the truth at the same time. Bryan stayed close. The mobile turned above them. The nightlight glowed. Outside the nursery, the house remained dark.   Inside, Paul Goldhawk was back.   Not healed. Not safe from what came next.   But back.   And for one fragile moment, that was enough to make all three of them hold on.
    • One thing that I really wanted to explore here is how CDRD might affect someone who went through it without the benefits of the classification exam and immediate medical assistance. So Arinae's progression is pretty uneven right now. Physically, her shrinking happened a lot faster in the beginning just because of the CDRD caused her to shrink at an accelerated rate.  She also really hasn't had a moment to let her adrenal system rest and actually begin processing things. She knows she's in a difficult situation but she's still going through a pretty traumatic 12 hours. Arinae has really had to learn how to just get through difficult circumstances and she's been running on survival mode for four years. There are probably going to be some changes once she can feel like she's safe and stop focusing on protecting herself moment to moment.
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