Chapter 1005: Stella’s Birthday (2)
Dinner moved like a tide—arriving in waves, retreating into jokes, returning with noodles that had the exact right bite. Reika’s kitchen army stacked empty steamers like trophies. Seraphina sent two sorbets out as a preview and made the freezer sound pleased. The city leaned into night outside our windows, hoverlights humming over the avenues like polite fireflies.
"Round two," Reika announced, clapping once. "Final gifts before cake."
Aria dragged Marcus to the front. "He was going to gift you a calculus problem," she said, "but I slapped his hand."
"I brought a lab pass," Marcus protested. "Supervised hours. Safety modules pre-cleared."
"See?" Aria said, smug. "Growth."
Jin and Kali exchanged a look that said ’politics later, cake now.’ "The residency stands," Jin told Stella. "If you’d rather do it during school breaks, we’ll arrange tutors."
"And a corner office," Kali added. "With a window and a door you can lock when men talk loudly."
"I’m twelve—no, thirteen," Stella corrected herself. "So I will take a door, but not the men."
"Smart girl," Alice said, passing by with a tray.
Elias lifted a hand. "One addendum to the tablet: I snuck in a build of the sim suite we use for city-scale evacuation models. It’s stripped down and safe. You can test your mana-visualizer routing on fake data before anyone spends real fuel."
Stella’s eyes went wide. "Thank you, Uncle Elias."
He blinked, then nodded once, like someone had promoted him quietly and he didn’t want to scare it away.
My parents set their gift on the table between us—the framed photo of Magnus, Seventh Peak blue and winter light. Stella touched the corner of the frame and looked at me.
"For your project," Alice repeated gently. "Stories deserve good anchors."
"Thank you, Grandma," Stella said. Douglas went suspiciously still for a second and then pulled both of them into a hug that lasted exactly as long as it needed to.
I cleared my throat. "My turn." I sat and patted my knee, and Stella climbed up like she’d never stopped being small.
"Rules say I can’t give you a particle cannon," I said.
"Boo," Cecilia murmured.
"However," I continued, "I can give you this."
I opened my palm. A flat ring rested there—dull, unassuming, threaded with an almost invisible seam.
"It’s a pocket frame," I said. "Not a big Grey door. Just enough to hold a workspace the size of a shoebox. It keeps experiments from escaping and keeps noise from bothering neighbors. It works only for you."
Stella turned it in the light and smiled so wide the room got brighter. "Thank you, Daddy."
"Also," I added, because I am constitutionally incapable of leaving well enough alone, "I booked us a weekend at Mount Hua. We’ll bring flowers. We’ll tell stories. We’ll do your project right."
Her arms tightened around my neck. No words. None needed.
"Food, then speech, then cake," Reika said, checking the clipboard like the world depended on it.
We ate. The table became a respectable disaster—sauce drips, crumb trails, the polite casualties of a good meal. Conversations braided and unbraided across the room.
Kali leaned over to Jin. "If she takes that residency, I want first refusal on the patent."
"Negotiate with her counsel," Jin said, nodding toward me.
"Her counsel just gave her a shoebox universe," Kali said. "I’m doomed."
Aria cornered Marcus with a plate of dumplings. "If you ask her math questions as a gift, I will end you."
"I brought a lab pass," he repeated, scandalized. "I’m not a monster."
My father taught Stella how to flip a pancake in a dry pan without destroying the ceiling. Alice sat with Cecilia and Rachel, heads close, talking softly about how to give children power without letting the world take their childhood to pay for it. Seraphina tuned the room temperature with tiny gestures, like a conductor coaxing a string section.
I stood back for a moment and let it all happen. The blue roses breathed. The city hummed. For someone whose job sometimes involves stopping catastrophes with one hand while writing new laws with the other, this was the hardest, best kind of work: hold a room where people you love get to be people.
"Speech," Rachel called, cupping her hands. "Dad words. Now."
I tapped my glass with a spoon—one polite clink. "Thirteen," I said, looking at the person who mattered most tonight. "You are brilliant in ways that scare me, brave in ways I don’t deserve, and kinder than I am on my best day. You asked me this week to tell you about my master. He would have liked you for your questions and loved you for the way you listen."
Stella’s chin wobbled. Mine did not. Obviously.
"I have fought a lot of things," I went on. "Some of them rude, some of them ancient, some of them both. I didn’t win those fights because I had the biggest sword. I won because I had a reason. You are a very good reason."
"Daddy," she said, helplessly.
"So," I finished, "happy birthday, Stella Nightingale. May your projects be fun, your math be elegant, your mistakes be small and instructive, and your world be full of people who clap when the pancake doesn’t hit the ceiling."
Applause. Laughter. Cecilia pretended to dab her eyes like a scandalized duchess. Reika handed me a napkin without looking because she knew I’d need one. I did.
Cake time. Reika lit thirteen slim candles. Stella took a breath, looked around at her five moms, her grandparents, her aunt and almost-uncle, friends who outrank kings and still show up on time with gifts, and then closed her eyes.
She didn’t say her wish out loud. Good. Wishes like that deserve privacy.
She blew. All thirteen went out at once. The room cheered like we’d survived a war. In our house, sometimes those are the same thing.
We cut cake. Frosting found noses. Elias lost a bet about whether Seraphina could slice a perfect wedge with a thread of ice (she could). Jin tried to be dignified and failed when Stella smudged his cheek. Kali pretended to be furious and failed harder.
Later, when the music softened and people drifted into clusters—Alice and Rose arguing gently about soil, Douglas and Marcus trading grill techniques like state secrets, Aria and Rachel teaching Stella a card game that I suspect was invented five minutes ago—Stella tugged my sleeve.
"Project reveal," she whispered.
We dimmed the lights. She set a glass dome on the coffee table, placed one of Rose’s blue roses under it, and tapped the pocket frame ring I’d given her.
The dome hummed. Gentle light laced through the petals. When she spoke—just one word, "Master"—the air inside filled with soft, shifting script and a quiet recording: my voice from earlier, telling her about the way Magnus held a sword like it was already in love with him. The words curled like petals and settled. The rose breathed the story in and glowed a little brighter.
The room went very still in the way rooms do when they are watching something honest.
"It keeps ten moments," Stella said, voice small but steady. "For when we want to remember. I’ll make more domes."
Alice’s eyes shone. My father put a hand over his mouth. Reika’s clipboard acquired a drop of water that absolutely wasn’t a tear. Five moms looked at their daughter like their hearts had found new rooms.
I don’t keep many prayers ready. I kept one then: please let this girl have as many days like this as she can carry.
The night thinned. People drifted home on hovercars and promises. Jin and Kali left with the Western courtesy that thanks you and threatens to buy the building if you don’t invite them again. Elias stayed long enough to clean without being caught cleaning. Aria hugged me and made me promise to teach Marcus the pancake flip. Marcus promised to pay if it hit the ceiling. My parents kissed Stella goodnight, twice.
When the door finally shut and the house got quiet, Stella climbed onto the couch beside me, rested her head on my shoulder, and sighed like math after a perfect proof.
"Good birthday?" I asked.
"The best," she said. "Can we go to Mount Hua next week?"
"We will," I said. "We’ll bring blue roses that look like quiet."
"And pancakes," she murmured, already drowsy.
"Obviously."
I watched her fall asleep in pieces—the way kids do when they know they’re safe—and thought about how power gets measured wrong. People count cities and wars. They should count rooms like this.
Thirteen candles, five moms, too many snacks, and a glass dome full of a story worth telling twice.
That felt like winning.