Emily’s room smells like vanilla, old books, and something warm I can’t name. Maybe it’s safety. Maybe it’s magic. Maybe it’s just her. She talks a mile a minute as she leads me through the hallway toward my room, pointing out creaky floorboards, the bathroom we’ll share, and the window that sticks when it rains. I barely hear her. My head is too full.
I’ve only met three people in this house, and already it feels different. Too different. Not like the homes where I counted the days until I left. Not like the families who smiled for the paperwork and ignored me the rest of the time. Not like the places where I kept my bag packed just in case. This place feels warm. Real. Dangerous. Because warmth means hope. And hope means disappointment.
Emily pushes open a door. “This one’s yours.”
The room is small but bright, with soft blankets folded neatly on the bed and a little lamp glowing on the nightstand. It looks lived‑in, but not by someone else, like it was waiting for me. I sit on the edge of the bed and clutch the blanket. It’s soft. Clean. Not the scratchy kind they give you in temporary placements. Emily flops beside me, legs crossed, eyes radiant. “You okay?”
I nod. Lie. “Just tired.”
She tilts her head. “You’re overwhelmed.”
I blink. “What?”
“You’re overwhelmed,” she repeats, like it’s obvious. “You’re trying not to get attached. You think we’re going to kick you out when the money runs out.” I stare at her. She shrugs. “You’re not subtle.”
My throat tightens. “I age out in a month.”
“So?”
“So most families don’t keep kids past that. Especially not ones they just got.”
Emily rolls her eyes. “We’re not most families.” I don’t answer. I can’t. She leans closer, voice softening. “You’ll always be welcome here, Raven. I mean it.”
A part of me wants to believe her. Wants to grab onto her words and hold them tight. But promises like that have broken me before. I’ve heard them whispered in hallways, murmured over paperwork, tossed out like lifelines that always snapped when I reached for them. Why should this time be different? But something in this house, this room, this girl makes the doubt waver.
Something at the edges of my fear stirs, like the house itself is holding its breath, waiting for me to notice that maybe, just maybe, things could change here. Before I can respond, the air shifts. Not cold. Not warm. Just… aware. I feel eyes on me. Not Emily’s. I glance toward the doorway.
Noah stands there, one hand braced against the frame, eyes locked on me like he’s seeing something he didn’t expect. Something he can’t look away from. His expression is unreadable, but the air around him feels sharp, charged. Emily notices. “Noah?”
He blinks, straightens, clears his throat. “Sorry. Mom said to come down. Raven needs to meet Dad and say goodbye to Ms. Carter.”
I nod, heart beating too fast. He doesn’t move. Neither do I.
Then he steps back, disappearing down the hall.
Emily grins. “He’s weird around you.”
I swallow. “I noticed.”
She hops off the bed and offers her hand. “Come on. Dad’s in the kitchen. He’s quieter than Mom but super nice. And Ms. Carter’s probably itching to leave.”
I take her hand, and as we walk toward the stairs, I feel it again. Something is waking up. And I can’t explain it. Emily bounces down the steps. I follow slower, my hand trailing along the railing, trying to steady myself. My head is spinning, this house, these people, the way Emily seems to read my mind, the way Noah looked at me like he recognized something I didn’t know I had.
The living room is warm and bright, the kind of cozy that looks staged for a magazine. A fire crackles in the stone fireplace even though it’s not that cold. The smell of chili and cornbread drifts from the kitchen, wrapping around me like a blanket I’m not sure I’m allowed to touch.
Noah stands near the bottom of the stairs, leaning against the wall. His jaw is tight, his shoulders tense. He keeps glancing at his phone like he’s waiting for something, or trying to avoid something. When our eyes meet, he looks away fast. Something’s bothering him. Something big.
Emily nudges me forward. “Come on. Dad’s in the kitchen.”
I follow her through the archway. Liam Connor stands at the table, tall and broad‑shouldered, with warm eyes and a quiet presence that fills the room. He’s talking to Ms. Carter, who’s flipping through a stack of papers.
When he sees me, he smiles. Not the polite, forced kind I’m used to. Something warmer. Realer. “Raven,” he says, stepping forward. “I’m Liam. It’s good to finally meet you.”
Finally, like they’ve been waiting.
I manage a small smile. “Hi.”
Ms. Carter pats the chair beside her. “Raven, sweetheart, come sit with me. We need to go over a few things.”
My stomach knots. Paperwork always means rules. Expectations. Timelines. End dates. I sit, folding my hands in my lap. “What do you need from me to age out?” I ask quietly. The room goes still. Mrs. Connor, who’s been stirring something on the stove, turns sharply. “Age out?”
Ms. Carter freezes. “I… was going to talk to you about that.”
Emily’s eyes widen. Noah steps into the doorway, phone forgotten. I swallow. “I turn eighteen on Halloween. So… next month. I want to know what I need to do. For when the placement ends.”
Mrs. Connor sets the spoon down with a soft clatter. “Raven, honey… no one told us you were aging out so soon.”
Ms. Carter sighs. “The Connors have already agreed, they want you to stay. At least until you finish school.”
I stare at her. “What?”
“That’s right,” Mrs. Connor says, coming to sit across from me. “You’re a senior. You deserve stability. A home. You’re welcome here as long as you need.”
My throat tightens. “But… the money...”
Liam shakes his head. “We didn’t do this for the money.” His voice is steady, firm, leaving no room for doubt. “This is your home,” he says. “For as long as you want it.”
I blink hard, trying to process the words. No one has ever said anything like that to me. Not once. Not in seventeen years. Emily beams. “Told you.”
Noah doesn’t say anything, but when I glance at him, he’s watching me again, quiet, intense, like he’s trying to make sure I believe it. I don’t know what to say. I don’t know how to breathe around the sudden ache in my chest. Home. They said home. And for the first time in my life, I think… maybe it could be.
The hope inside me is sharp and bright, too new to trust but impossible to ignore. Fear curls beneath it, reminding me how easily everything can be lost. But for this moment, I let myself believe it matters that I’m here. Maybe that’s enough.
Golden kitchen light spills across my hands, warm and real. Through the window, the autumn sky deepens, and somewhere in the distance, a church bell tolls once, soft through the fog, like a promise. Or a warning. I close my eyes and let the moment settle around me. Hope. Fear. And the quiet wish that this time, I won’t be forgotten.