Chapter 6: chapter 6
Chapter Six: I Heard Him Crying
(Elian's Point of View)
---
He didn't see me at first.
I had come by without thinking — again.
No reason. No plan. Just this quiet pull that dragged me to the steps of his building like gravity had changed its mind about me.
I was about to knock when I heard it.
Not a voice.
Not footsteps.
Crying.
Soft. Strangled. Like someone trying not to make a sound but failing anyway.
It came from the other side of his door.
Low. Shaky. Real.
It broke something in me.
I stood frozen for a second, my fist halfway raised, my breath caught in my throat.
Daniel.
Crying.
The boy who growled at shadows.
The boy who had wings that shimmered with pain and power.
The boy who told me not to stay.
Now he was behind that door — crying like he'd been doing it forever and no one ever noticed.
---
I sat down on the stairs. I didn't leave.
I didn't knock either.
Because something told me... if he wanted someone to hear, he'd open the door.
So I waited.
Long after the crying stopped.
Long after the hallway light flickered off and left me in the dark.
I waited.
---
It was almost midnight when the lock turned.
The door creaked open like it was afraid of being loud.
He looked different — not just tired, but like he'd been unraveling in silence.
His eyes were red. His lips pressed tightly together. His jaw tense, like he was trying to hold himself together.
He didn't say anything.
I didn't either.
I just stood up slowly and whispered, "Hi."
He stared at me for a long time.
Not angry. Not scared. Just... unsure.
Then he stepped aside.
I walked in.
---
His apartment was colder than before, but it wasn't the air.
It was him.
Everything felt like it was holding its breath.
He sat on the floor again.
Not the bed. Not the couch. The floor — like he couldn't let himself feel comfort.
I followed and sat beside him.
We didn't talk for a while.
The silence between us wasn't heavy, though.
It was... fragile.
Like one wrong word could shatter something we hadn't even built yet.
---
"I'm not going to ask," I said, softly.
He glanced at me, confused. "Ask what?"
"About what you are. About the wings. About the guy in the hoodie. Any of it."
His fingers twitched slightly. He was still holding the edge of his shirt like he needed an anchor.
"I'm just here," I added. "You don't have to tell me anything."
He looked at me like that idea didn't make sense to him. Like people didn't stay unless they wanted something.
---
He didn't speak for a while. But then, in a whisper that was barely audible, he said:
"You should be scared of me."
I shook my head. "I'm not."
He laughed — a single breath, bitter and short. "You should be."
"I'm not," I said again, firmer.
We sat in that space between truths and lies, and he started to lean closer.
Not like a decision.
Like a reflex.
Like something inside him was reaching out even if his mind was still running.
Our shoulders touched.
Then our knees.
Then his eyes flicked to mine.
The air shifted.
He leaned in—slowly, like the world would break if we moved too fast.
I didn't stop him.
His breath brushed my mouth.
So close.
So close I felt my heart whisper "yes" before I could even think.
But then he pulled back.
Not fast. Not in panic.
Just far enough to leave that breathless ache between us.
"I'm sorry," he murmured.
I smiled — small, gentle, and a little heartbroken.
"Don't be."
---
He didn't kiss me.
But he almost did.
And honestly?
That was enough.
Because even almost meant he was starting to see me.
Even almost meant he didn't want to be alone anymore.
And maybe… maybe I didn't want to be either.