Chapter 267: Our Home
Sierra looked up at him. โIf you want to talk, Iโll listen.โ If he didnโt, she wouldnโt push.
Johnathan let out a small smile. Of course, sheโd say that. Every part of her just hit him right in the heart.
โTodayโs my birthday. I never celebrate itโฆbecause my mom died on this day. Fell from the hospital roof. Right in front of me. I saw the whole thing.โ
Sierraโs grip on his hand tightened. She didnโt say anythingโthere was nothing to say. Just held onto him.
โSince I can remember, she wasโฆsplit. Sometimes fine, sometimes completely broken. Back then, I didnโt understand. Not until after she died. Not long after that, my father brought another woman home. His current wifeโshe used to be my motherโs best friend. My half-brother? Only eight years younger than me. That day, my mom had another episode. She was rushed to the hospital. I called him, over and overโhe never answered. Then she fell. And I saw him rush out from another part of the hospital. Turns out, he was there the whole time. With them. Because his other son had a fever.โ
Johnathan said it flatly, like it was just a report. Even his grandfather never knew his father had been in that hospital. But he remembered it allโthe panic on Chaseโs face, the shock, the regret when he saw his son standing there.
Sierraโs chest tightened. She hadnโt imagined the truth would be this awful. She didnโt try to comfort him. She just hugged him.
So even someone like Johnathanโwarm, composed, dependableโhad this kind of past. They held each other without saying a word.
After a long while, Sierra finally pulled back. โI actually got you something,โ she said quietly. โI know you donโt celebrate your birthday, but I still wanted to give it to you. Wanna see it?โ
Johnathan nodded. โYeah.โ
โThen letโs go home.โ She took his hand and led him out.
Turns out, she wasnโt the only one without a home. Johnathan didnโt have one either. They were the same.
Back at their apartment, the atmosphere softened. Even though they hadnโt lived there long, the place felt like homeโevery corner had their fingerprints on it.
Sierra didnโt rush to bring out the gift. First, she grabbed the first-aid kit. Johnathan hadnโt worn gloves earlier. His hands were a messโknuckles raw and bleeding. She carefully cleaned and disinfected his hands, her own face twisting at the sight.
โDoesnโt it hurt?โ she asked, wincing for him.
โItโs nothing.โ He really meant it. These were just surface wounds. Compared to the things heโd been throughโmercenary missions, extreme sports, broken limbsโthis was nothing. But he didnโt say that out loud. She already looked so worried. He didnโt want to add to it. For the first time, Johnathan felt like he didnโt want anyone to hurt for him. Not even a little.
Once she finished bandaging him up, Sierra finally brought out the gift. Johnathan blinked. โWhatโs this?โ
It was a tiny model house, sealed under glassโan exact replica of their place. Made entirely from chemical materialsโcopper sulfate, alum, gradient crystals that shimmered like magic. Dreamy. Beautiful. And on the front: two little words. Our Home.
He recognized every detail. Every measurement. The precision of it. It mustโve taken her days to make. Heโd received more gifts in his life than he could count. Houses. Cars. A private island. Hell, when he was born, his grandfather bought a star and named it after him. But thisโฆ This hit different. His chest tightened, the kind of ache that didnโt hurt but swelled and ached all the same.
Sierra shifted nervously. โI didnโt know what to get youโฆโ
Johnathan didnโt say anything. He couldnโt. Not yet. Because in that moment, for the first time in a long time, he felt like someone had really seen him. And gave him a piece of something heโd never hadโa home.