
Once Upon a Broken Heart
Chapter 14
Chapter 14: What Love Said
She went to find Love deliberately, on the twelfth day.
This required research she'd been putting off—the Court of Fates was accessible primarily through the between-space, and the between-space required a Fate to navigate. She'd been accessing it only with Cassian. Going without him was theoretically possible—there were historical accounts of humans navigating independently, through the threshold protocols—but required a specific location and a specific kind of attention.
The threshold she used was the cartography shop's back door.
Her father had noted it in a margin of his research: here, the between leaks in. The shop has been a crossroads of accounts for two generations. The back door has two surveys disagreeing about its exact position. The disagreement creates a threshold.
She'd read this three years ago and filed it as metaphor. Now she looked at it as data.
She stood at the back door at dawn—the threshold hour, the in-between time—and she said to no one in particular: "I need to speak with the Fate of Love."
The door opened onto the ordinary alley.
She walked through it anyway.
The passage was different without Cassian—colder, less certain, requiring a quality of attention she had to maintain actively rather than following his lead. But it resolved, eventually, into a between-space that was not his domain but was somewhere else: warmer, quieter, with the quality of a room where many important conversations had happened.
Love was there.
Not the Court's high formality. A room with two chairs, a fireplace, the smell of something she couldn't identify but that was deeply, specifically associated with moments of real connection—the smell of being known, if that could be a smell. Love sat in one chair. She sat in the other.
"I expected you eventually," Love said.
"I found out about the watching," Isla said. "The two years. The commission."
"I know."
"I'm not here to complain about it." She looked at the fire. "I'm here because I need to understand something and I think you're the only one who can help me."
Love waited.
"The grief that can break the loop," she said. "The quality that's required—complete, freely given, not from love." She paused. "How do you tell the difference? Between grief that grows from full understanding and grief that is simply—love, renamed."
Love looked at her for a long moment.
"Why do you ask?" Love said. Not evasively—genuinely curious.
"Because I've spent six weeks learning someone. And when I think about—about the third tear, about the grief of knowing him completely—" She stopped. "I need to know whether what I feel is what the curse requires. Or whether it's something that would activate the curse instead."
"Those are very different things."
"I know."
Love was quiet for a moment.
"Love," the Fate said, "is attachment. It wants to hold. It grieves the distance, the absence, the end, the incompleteness—it grieves anything that is not full presence." A pause. "The grief that breaks the loop is different. It's the grief of complete witness. Of knowing something fully and understanding that the knowing doesn't prevent loss. Of holding someone's full reality in your mind—every part of them—and feeling the weight of that reality, including the weight of their finitude."
"That sounds like the same thing," Isla said.
"It isn't." Love looked at the fire. "Love is afraid. It grieves because it can't bear the loss. The other grief—the one that can break the curse—is not afraid. It grieves because understanding is its own kind of love, and understanding has to include truth, and the truth includes loss, and you hold that clearly and still." A pause. "Love says: I can't stand to lose you. The other grief says: you are real and complete and this is true and that is true simultaneously."
Isla sat with this.
"Is it possible," she said carefully, "to have both?"
Love looked at her with the tired, comprehensive eyes.
"Yes," Love said. "It is possible to understand someone so completely that the understanding becomes love, and the love becomes grief, and the grief is both afraid and clear at the same time." A very long pause. "That's the most complete thing that can happen between two people." Another pause. "It's also what I warned you about."
"You warned me about breaking myself," she said.
"Yes."
"I'm not broken," she said. "I'm—" She thought about it. "I'm angry that I was chosen and watched. I'm also—I understand why. I also understand that he gave me every opportunity to leave and I didn't take them, not because I was manipulated but because—" She stopped.
"Because?" Love said gently.
"Because I kept finding things worth staying for," she said. "Not the residue. Not the bond. Him. The vault organized by texture. The coat thread. The honest answers." She looked at the fire. "The fact that he told me about the watching before I asked, even though he knew it would make me angry, because he thought I deserved to know." She paused. "He changed the terms for you, Love told me. He made the bargain honest in a way he'd never done before, because he thought I deserved to choose clearly."
"Yes," Love said. "He did."
"That's not manipulation," she said. "That's—" She searched for the word.
"Respect," Love said.
She looked at the fire.
"I'm going to give him the third tear," she said.
"I know," Love said.
"Not because I have to. Not because the bond compels it." She looked at Love. "Because it's the right thing to do, and because I've chosen it. On full information."
Love looked at her with those old eyes—tired, yes, but not hopeless. Something else in them, something she hadn't seen there in the previous conversations.
"You know what happens to you," Love said. "If it doesn't work—"
"I'm not going to love him," she said. "Not in the way the curse requires."
"How do you know?"
She thought about it.
"Because I'm a mapmaker's daughter," she said. "I've been noting the terrain. I know exactly where I am." She paused. "I know where the edge is. I'm not past it."
Love looked at her for a long moment.
Then, very quietly: "Be sure."
"I am," she said.
She went back through the threshold. The alley was bright with November morning. She went to make tea, and then she went to find Corvin.
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