Stuck in an Island with Twelve Beautiful Women -
Chapter 931
Chapter 931: Chapter 931
Their exploration group, Jude, Rose, Stella, Emma, and Serena, moved through the orchard’s outer perimeter and into the northwest stretch, where trees thinned and gnarled roots curled out of the earth like sleeping beasts. They marked glyphs with chalk, painted ribbons onto branches, and studied the movements of moss and insects. The air was heavier here, more still. No watchers came. Not even the faint mist trails that usually indicated their presence.
"Too quiet," Emma whispered. "No birds."
Jude crouched beside a mound of roots that had grown over a half-buried stone. He dug carefully with a bone knife, revealing faint etchings beneath. Symbols. Familiar ones.
Stella knelt beside him, brushing dirt with a sprig of dried grass. "It’s a naming stone."
Jude stared at the symbols. They weren’t watcher glyphs, they were something older. Almost human. He traced the edges, lips parting in realization. "These are from the first year."
Rose peered over his shoulder. "Before we built the orchard?"
"Before the watchers came close." Jude brushed the moss away. "I carved this."
Serena frowned. "Why here?"
"I don’t remember."
The stone bore twelve names. Not theirs, but twelve, like placeholders, or prayers. He’d carved it in desperation. Hope. When he still thought rescue was coming.
Jude sat back on his heels, a chill sliding down his spine. "This place... this is where I thought I’d die."
The group grew quiet. Wind rustled dryly in the branches above. Stella placed a firm hand on his shoulder, grounding him. "You didn’t."
"No." Jude closed his eyes. "I didn’t. I married twelve women and built a home."
"And saved us more times than we can count," Serena said softly.
He looked at them, these women who had shared terror and hunger and laughter and firelight. Emma offered him a smile so tender it broke something small inside him. He rose slowly, pressing his palm against the stone once more. "Let’s rebind this place. Make it ours again."
They gathered twigs, leaves, blossoms, and carved small offerings, new names, present names. Susan. Rose. Serena. Layla. Natalie. Zoey. Lucy. Stella. Emma. Sophie. Grace. Scarlet. Jude. Thirteen, now. A family. They wrapped them in thin ribbon, tied them to branches above the stone. Jude hummed an old melody as they worked, a tune Grace had taught him.
By the time they returned to camp, the sun was dipping low. Golden light slanted through trees, and smoke from the cooking fire curled upward. The others were gathered near the pit, passing flatbread and herb-simmered vegetables. Zoey ran forward when she saw them, tugging on Jude’s arm.
"Laurel wove her first bracelet today!"
He grinned. "Did she?"
"She used the silver vine like Grace. Lucy says she’s a natural."
Laurel ran up proudly, showing off the crude but charming weave of twine and silver thread. Jude knelt, admiring it like a precious jewel. "It’s perfect."
She threw her arms around his neck, then ran back to Sophie for dinner. Jude straightened, rubbing his neck. He caught Grace’s eyes from across the fire, she was holding Raven in her lap, murmuring something into his hair. She gave Jude a quiet nod.
They ate together, laughter drifting among them like smoke, stories shared and hands brushing, occasional stolen kisses between bites. Natalie pulled Jude aside after the meal, her fingers cool on his wrist.
"I want to show you something," she whispered.
He followed her behind the tent, where moonlight pooled over the riverstones. She knelt and pulled out a long piece of cloth from a covered basket. It was embroidered with symbols, some of them watchers’ glyphs, others more abstract. But together, they told a story.
"Each thread is a day," she said. "Each knot a moment we feared or survived."
He ran his hands over it, heart heavy. "It’s beautiful."
She turned toward him slowly, brushing his cheek with her fingers. "So are you."
He kissed her then, not rushed, but deep, years of longing and memory and shared breath rising between them. Her fingers threaded into his hair, and when they finally parted, they stood forehead to forehead, their breaths mingling in the cool night.
"We’re still here," she whispered.
"We are."
They returned to the fire together. Jude spent the rest of the evening weaving himself into all the spaces he knew best: Emma’s arms around his waist as she spoke softly of new herbs she wanted to try, Layla kissing his shoulder with a giggle when he teased her about her overcooked root stew, Lucy braiding his hair while Zoey hummed and braided hers. They formed a circle of touches and words and glances, each woman pulling a part of him, each one holding him in ways only they could.
Later, in the quiet of night, when stars scattered like grains of salt across the sky, he lay between Sophie and Grace beneath the open sky. Grace’s hand rested on his chest, Sophie’s on his thigh, both warm and steady.
"What do we name this new beginning?" Grace asked, voice low.
"Dialogue," Jude whispered. "Or perhaps... becoming."
Sophie nodded. "We’re more ourselves than we’ve ever been."
The orchard trees swayed gently above them, and from the distance came a shimmer of blue light, watchers pulsing at the far edge, not close, but not gone. They watched, like stars with breath. Jude closed his eyes, letting their presence settle in his chest.
He dreamt of roots growing deep beneath the earth, of stone markers whispering forgotten prayers, of ribbons tangled in wind, of kisses under the orchard moon, of laughter louder than storms.
And he awoke with his hand resting on Grace’s, Sophie pressed to his back, the smell of earth and firewood and love all around him.
Mist clung low to the forest floor, thick and humming with dew as Jude led the quiet procession down the northward slope. The orchard faded behind them like a memory, warm, golden, gently watched. In its place came the hush of old trees and dense canopies, the smell of bark and growing moss, and something deeper: the pulse of the island shifting.
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