"Sol!" she gasped softly, and before anyone could stop her, she rushed to his side, nearly tripping over the mat in the process. "Youâre really awake! I thought... I thought you wouldnât wake up again!"
Her voice trembled, soft and breathless, every word spilling over the next. She knelt beside him, holding the berry bundle against her chest like a forgotten thought.
"Iâm fine," he said, though the way her eyes glistened made him feel like a liar.
She sniffed, nodding too quickly. "Really? Youâre sure? You donât look fine."
He chuckled weakly. "Well, I look better than dead, right?"
That got a small laugh out of her, shaky but still cute.
She sniffed and nodded, hair falling in her face. "You promise you wonâtâwonât disappear again?"
He laughed under his breath. "Iâll try."
Meanwhile, Arelia just smiled faintly, shaking her head. "You see, Liora, I told you he was strong enough. The river always finds its way."
Veyra snorted. "More like heâll trip and drown first."
Arelia just sighed. "You should try kindness sometime."
"Kindness doesnât keep you alive," Veyra muttered.
"Veyra," Arelia said, her voice still calm but firmer now. "Enough."
"What? Iâm just saying," Veyra muttered, crossing her arms, but she didnât push it further.
Lyra, who had been tending the fire silently, finally spoke. "You three should rest. Tomorrow will be long. The forest doesnât feed those who wake late."
Her tone carried quiet authority, and even Veyra didnât argue this time. The daughters nodded, setting down their foraged goods and moving around the room in a smooth, familiar rhythm.
For the first time since waking in this world, he saw what
life
looked like here. The routine. The rhythm. The unspoken coordination between them.
The three girls started sorting their stuff, moving around the firelight like theyâd done it forever. It was messy, but in a good way. Real.
Arelia put the fruits aside, started cutting leaves with a bone knife.
Veyra stacked wood and fed the flames, shooting side-eyes at the door every few seconds.
Liora just sat near him, too close maybe, quietly humming some random tune that didnât sound like anything but somehow felt safe.
He just simply sat there, watching quietly.
This was life here.
No tech, no bullshit, no background music. Just people who worked all day so they didnât starve tomorrow.
And they didnât just live together... they
survived together.
Yeah, it was chaos out there. Monsters, cold, hunger, death waiting with open arms. But in here? For a few moments at least, it felt like a home.
And somehow, sitting there watching them, Sol felt both like an outsider and... strangely at home.
After finally sorting everything out, they sat together and it started eating. Dinner wasnât anything fancy. No roasted cartoon tomahawk meat, no stew bubbling in a pot... just fruit. Wild ones theyâd brought back, different shapes, different colors, some bright, some dull, but nevertheless, none he could actually recognize.
They didnât look like the ones back home either... no perfect supermarket gloss, no stickers or names. Just raw, uneven things ripped straight from trees. Some were too sour, some too sweet, some had this weird smoky aftertaste that was... actually kinda addictive.
He took a bite and blinked. "This one tastes... different," he muttered, chewing slowly. "Canât even explain it. Just... weird."
Lyra smiled faintly, seated cross-legged near the fire, slicing another fruit open with a bone knife. The orange glow hit her cheekbones just right, softening the weariness in her face. "Youâll get used to it," she said quietly. "Our trees feed us well, if we respect them."
He nodded, not sure what that meant but too hungry to question philosophy.
Lyra passed him the largest share. A small pile of the sweetest ones, the kind that left a faint honey taste on his tongue. "Eat," she said. "You need strength more than anyone."
He looked down at the bowl, then at the others. The girls had smaller shares... noticeably smaller.
Before he could say anything, Veyraâs voice cut in, sharp as always.
"Why does he get the best ones?" she said, narrowing her eyes. "He didnât even worked."
Lyra wasnât surprised, it was almost a daily routine by now. So she didnât even look up from cutting. "Because heâs hurt," she said simply. "He needs energy. Youâre strong enough to last a night."
Veyra scoffed, crossing her arms. "Hurt or not, heâs got both hands, doesnât he? Can still chew."
Arelia gave her a small look... not angry, not scolding, just tired. "Let him eat, Veyra. We can find more tomorrow. The forest always gives back what it takes."
"Yeah, unless it decides to eat us instead," Veyra muttered, but she went quiet, tearing a piece of fruit with her teeth.
Arelia leaned over and placed one extra fruit near him, her expression soft. "You need this more than I do," she said gently. "Youâve lost more than just strength."
He wanted to say something... a thank-you, maybe... but the words didnât fit. He just nodded, awkwardly.
Liora, meanwhile, was quiet the whole time. Sitting beside him, nibbling on her fruit like a squirrel, eyes flicking between everyone. She kept glancing at his pile.
He caught her once... then again... and realized what was coming.
Sure enough, the moment the others turned away, she snuck her hand out, grabbed one of the smaller fruits from his bowl, and popped it into her own with lightning speed.
He stared. She froze mid-chew as their eyes met.
Her expression said
donât tell
, wide and innocent and slightly filled with mischief.
He couldnât help it. He laughed... quietly under his breath, shaking his head. "You little thief," he whispered.
She stuck out her tongue, trying not to smile. "You had too many anyway," she whispered back, voice soft and breathy.
Lyraâs voice cut through from across the fire. "Liora. Eat slowly."
"Yes, mother," she said quickly, cheeks puffed full of stolen fruit.
They fell into a strange, quiet rhythm after that. The sound of chewing, the crackle of fire, the occasional distant howl outside. Simple, warm, human.