Chapter 1778
Emma approached, her steps slow and graceful. "I want to call you Sol."
The others turned to her.
"It means sun," she continued. "Light. Life."
The child smiled. "I like Sol."
Jude looked down at the warm body curled against him, heart aching with emotion. "Sol."
One by one, the wives repeated the name. Lucy. Rose. Stella. Susan. Zoey. Layla. Grace. Scarlet. Sophie. Natalie. Emma. And last, Serena, who stepped from the shadows at the edge of the trees, her eyes wide as she took in everything—the tree, the light, the child in Jude's arms.
"I felt it," she said, voice breaking. "Even from far away. I dreamed the moment it bloomed."
Sol looked at her and reached out.
She ran.
But not away—from fear, or rejection. She ran toward them, toward him. She dropped to her knees in front of Jude and pressed her lips to Sol's forehead, eyes brimming with tears.
"I knew you were real," she whispered.
Sol leaned into her kiss, content.
They spent the day building around the tree. Not with tools, not in haste—but through touch and intention. Wherever they laid their hands, the island shifted, provided, grew. A table rose from roots. Soft bedding formed in nests of petals and moss. Lanterns grew like fruit, glowing gently in the canopy. It was as if the island had simply been waiting to be asked the right way.
When night fell, the stars arrived in clusters more brilliant than any they'd seen. No clouds. No wind. Just the shimmer of Sol's first night under the heavens.
They lay together beneath the tree, all thirteen of them—Jude, his wives, and Sol nestled among them like a heartbeat returned to its body.
Soft touches were exchanged in the quiet. Not urgent. Not lustful. Just reverent. Zoey's hand slipped into Natalie's. Stella curled against Sophie. Susan kissed the curve of Lucy's shoulder, and Lucy, with a sigh, found Jude's hand in the dark.
Emma rested her head on Rose's lap, who stroked her hair while humming a melody that didn't seem to come from her at all, but from the roots beneath her.
They weren't dreaming anymore.
There was no monster now, no watchers, no darkness stalking their unity.
There was only Sol.
Born of passion, of dreams, of love so deep it had rewritten reality itself.
As sleep pulled them down, Sol whispered once more.
"Tomorrow, I'll show you what I can do."
And with that, the island dreamed alongside them—for the first time not of warning or trial or danger, but of future. Of lineage. Of light.
Of hope.
The morning came quietly, without birdsong or the rustle of trees. It arrived as a soft gold glow that slipped between the silver leaves of their new sanctuary, painting their bodies in a warm, sacred light. Jude was the first to wake, lying in the center of the circle they had made around Sol. The child still slept, tucked safely into the hollow between Jude's chest and Lucy's arm, his small breath rising and falling in perfect peace. Lucy was half-awake, her lips parted in a dreamy sigh as she curled tighter around Jude's side, her legs tangled with his.
Around them, the other women stirred slowly, one by one, as if the island itself had chosen not to wake them too abruptly, respecting the sanctity of what had been created. Emma stretched like a cat on a sun-warmed stone, her skin glowing, her back arching just enough to pull a quiet murmur from Zoey, who lay beside her and gently ran her nails up Emma's spine. Layla stirred next, blinking slowly as she rolled into Sophie's arms. Sophie kissed her forehead, whispered something that made Layla smile and blush, even half-asleep.
Sol opened his eyes.
There was no startle in the motion, only a smooth slide into wakefulness, as if he had simply decided the moment had come. His golden irises caught the light and reflected it, and when he looked up at Jude, a smile broke across his small face that pierced right through Jude's chest.
"Today," Sol said, sitting up.
Jude's voice was husky, low from sleep. "What happens today?"
Sol reached out and touched Jude's forehead, his small fingers warm. "We go deeper."
The wives gathered slowly, dressing not because they needed to, but out of habit, wrapping themselves in sheer silks and loose cloth that the island seemed to have woven for them during the night. The fabrics shimmered faintly, as if infused with starlight, and smelled of wild orchids and rain.
"What do you mean, deeper?" Rose asked, her voice curious but cautious.
Sol turned to her. "There's more. The roots run far below. You've only touched the surface."
"Of what?" Stella asked, brushing her fingers through Sol's golden hair.
"Of yourselves," Sol replied, his eyes moving from wife to wife. "And of the island."
Scarlet, sitting cross-legged near the edge of the tree's hollow, narrowed her eyes. "You're not just a child."
"No," Sol said softly. "I'm also a door."
"A door to what?" Susan asked.
Sol stood and reached for Jude's hand. "Come see."
The group rose together. There were no objections. Not this time. They followed Sol out of the sanctuary, down a winding new path that hadn't existed the day before. Trees leaned away from the path as if bowing. Flowers unfurled as they passed. The air grew cooler, the light dimmer—but not darker. It was silvered, enchanted, and laced with the kind of stillness that made their skin tingle.
The path ended at a circle of ancient stones, taller than any of them, arranged in a spiral that drew inward. At the center, a pool. Still, mirror-like, and black as midnight.
Jude stepped forward, but Sol held him back.
"You must go in together," Sol said. "All of you. This place remembers. And it wants to show you what it knows."
Grace looked toward the water. "Is it dangerous?"
"Yes," Sol said without hesitation. "But only if you resist."