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Observatory ruins at dawn.
Raj walked through the debris of what had once been their sanctuary, his bare feet careful among the shattered glass and twisted metal. The console where he'd first fought Suicide Squad lay in pieces, its quantum processors still sparking occasionally with residual chaos magic. Each step stirred memories—Roy's laughter echoing from the workshop, Kiran's quiet presence in the library, Match's silent vigil by the windows.
The morning light caught the broken fragments, turning destruction into something almost beautiful. Almost.
Roy's voice crackled through a salvaged communicator, tinged with exhaustion but underlaid with something new—hope. "Global panic's receding faster than we projected. The meta-human registration act got repealed unanimously—turns out when people see what heroes do instead of just hearing Waller's propaganda, opinions change pretty quickly." A pause, then softer: "You okay up there?"
Raj touched a fragment of the viewing screen where they'd watched countless sunrises together. "Define okay."
"Still breathing, still thinking, still giving a damn about people who probably don't deserve it."
"Then yeah. I'm okay."
Match emerged from the shadows near the perimeter and moved with the same careful protective precision. His red eyes swept the horizon with mechanical efficiency before settling on Raj with something that might have been concern.
"Perimeter secure," Match reported in his quiet monotone. "No immediate threats detected. The world is... quieter now."
Kiran floated down from where she'd been surveying the upper levels, her golden aura subdued to match the morning's sombre mood. She didn't speak immediately—just settled beside Raj and slipped her hand into his without comment. Her fingers were warm against his palm, grounding him in the present moment.
They stood together in comfortable silence, two people who had learned to communicate in glances and gentle touches. Kiran's thumb traced small circles against his knuckles; a gesture so subtle it might have been unconscious. But Raj felt the intention behind it—the quiet reassurance that whatever came next, they would face it together.
He looked up at the sky, eyes glowing faintly with residual power. "So much for a quiet afterlife."
Kiran's lips quirked upward. "Did you really think it would be that easy?"
"A man can dream."
"Men like you don't get easy dreams," she said, and squeezed his hand. "They get necessary ones."
The evening brought an unnatural stillness to the ruined observatory. No wind stirred the debris, no waves lapped at the shore below. Even the ever-present hum of Jeevika's systems seemed muted, as if reality itself was holding its breath.
Death of the Endless appeared as she always did—without fanfare or dramatic entrance. One moment they were alone among the ruins, the next she was simply there, perched on a broken beam with the same gentle smile she'd worn at the Source Wall.
"Hello again, Raj," she said, her voice carrying the warmth of sunset and the comfort of sleep long-earned. "You've been busy."
Raj felt Kiran tense beside him, but Death's presence wasn't threatening. If anything, it felt like coming home after a long, difficult journey.
"Death," he acknowledged with a slight nod. "I wasn't expecting a house call."
"I make exceptions for interesting cases." Her pale eyes took in the destruction around them with neither judgment nor surprise. "Our deal still stands, you know. If you want a way back to that, is."
The memory surfaced unbidden, "I still want to go back," he'd said, and she'd listened with infinite patience.
Death's gaze shifted to encompass Roy and Match, then settled on Kiran with particular attention. "But circumstances have changed, haven't they? Anchors have a way of making even the most restless souls want to stay put."
Kiran's hand tightened in his, and Raj felt her golden aura pulse with protective instinct. She floated slightly higher, not quite stepping between them but making her position clear.
"Kiran I've told you before that I am from outside the multiverse, but I also have a way back, a deal with death of the endless to solve multiple crises, and she provides a way home"
"You are not going anywhere," Kiran said, her voice carrying harmonics that made the air itself seem to listen. "Not without me."
Death's smile widened, genuine delight dancing in her ancient eyes. "Oh, I like her. She's got steel in her spine and fire in her heart. Good choice, Raj."
"I didn't choose—" Raj began, then stopped. Because that wasn't true, was it? Every day, he chose to stay, to fight, to build something better. Every morning, he woke up and chose to care about a world that had given him every reason not to. And increasingly, he chose to believe that someone like Kiran could see something worth saving in someone like him.
"Actually," he said, looking at Kiran with eyes that held the depth of collapsed stars, "I did choose. I choose every day."
Kiran's aura flared briefly, warm gold mixing with rainbow light in patterns that spoke of harmony achieved through conscious effort rather than accident.
Death clapped her hands together once, the sound somehow containing the gentle finality of closing books and finished symphonies. "Excellent. But you should know—this won't be the end of your trials. The Multiverse is vast, and some problems require... personal attention."
She gestured, and reality rippled. For a moment, they could see it—the infinite branching paths of existence, worlds upon worlds spinning in cosmic harmony. Earth-2, where the JSA struggled against encroaching shadows. Earth-10, where different choices had led to different tyrants. Earth-30, where Superman's good intentions had paved a road to authoritarian hell. Fifty-two known realities in the local cluster alone, each one precious, each one facing its own unique crisis.
"Your work here has rippled outward," Death said, her voice carrying the weight of absolute knowledge. "Waller's defeat, the exposure of government corruption, the proof that heroes can be held accountable without being destroyed—it's given people hope. And hope, as you know, is contagious."
She paused, her expression growing more serious. "But other worlds are watching, too. Some are inspired. Others... see opportunity in the chaos of change. The Multiverse needs guardians who understand that power without compassion is just another form of tyranny."
"And if I say no?" Raj asked, though they all knew he wouldn't.
"Then the Multiverse finds other heroes. It always does. But it won't find ones like you—outsiders who understand that saving the world means saving the people in it, not the systems they've built."
Death stood, her form beginning to fade into starlight and shadow. But before she disappeared entirely, she looked directly at Kiran.
"Take care of him," she said, her voice carrying the warmth of a mother's blessing. "And let him take care of you. Heroes work better in pairs—less chance of them forgetting what they're fighting for."
Kiran's response came without hesitation: "We won't let go."
"I know," Death said as she stepped backwards into the spaces between moments. "That's why I chose you both."
Her final words echoed from everywhere and nowhere: "When your task is done, the doors will open."
Three days later, observatory workshop at sunset.
Roy's hands stilled on the quantum resonance calibrator he'd been pretending to work on for the last hour. Across the workshop, Raj and Kiran stood together in that particular way they had—not quite touching, but existing in each other's orbit like binary stars.
"So," Roy said, his voice carefully casual, "when do you leave?"
"Tomorrow morning," Raj replied, equally careful. "Wanted to say farewell instead of just upping and leaving."
Match looked up from where he'd been organising spare parts with mechanical precision. His pale features showed subtle emotion.
"How long?" Roy asked, though he wasn't sure he wanted the answer.
Kiran's aura flickered, golden light dimming with unspoken regret. "We don't know. Death wasn't specific about timeframes."
"Could be years," Raj added quietly. "Could be decades. The Multiverse... doesn't run on human schedules."
Roy laughed, but there was no humour in it. "Right. Of course. Save one world, get drafted to save fifty-two more. That's just our luck."
The silence stretched between them, filled with everything they weren't saying. Jeevika's holographic form materialised near the central console, her usually bright demeanour subdued.
[I have prepared comprehensive documentation of all observatory systems,] she said, her digital voice carefully modulated. [As well as contingency protocols for various emergency scenarios. Roy's maintenance skills have improved significantly, though I still recommend against his tendency to 'percussive recalibration.']
"Hey!" Roy protested weakly. "That works sometimes."
[Seventeen percent of the time. I have statistical data.]
Despite everything, Kiran smiled. "We'll miss this. All of this."
Match stepped forward then, his movements precise but somehow hesitant. He reached into his jacket and withdrew something small—a photograph, edges worn from handling. It showed all of them on the observatory roof, a few days ago, Roy grinning while he showed off some new gadget, Raj laughing at something Kiran had whispered, her golden aura mixing with the sunset to paint everything in warm light. Match himself stood beside Roy, but his expression was softer than usual, content in his role as protector and family.
"I want you to take this," Match said, his quiet voice carrying unexpected weight. "So, you remember. When the universe gets too big, remember this."
Raj accepted the photograph with gentle hands, studying the captured moment of perfect normalcy. "Match..."
"Don't," the pale clone said firmly. "Don't say goodbye. Goodbyes are for people who aren't coming back."
Roy wiped his eyes with the back of his hand, not caring that his tears were shorting out some of his cybernetic interfaces. "He's right. This isn't goodbye. This is... see you later."
"Much later," Kiran said softly, floating over to wrap Roy in a fierce hug. "But we will see you. All of you."
Roy held her tight, his mechanical arm whirring softly as it adjusted its grip. "You'd better. I'm not good at the dramatic heroic speeches. That's Raj's job."
"I'll practice," Raj promised, pulling both Roy and Match into the embrace. For a moment, they stood there—four people who'd found family in the spaces between saving the world, holding onto each other while they still could.
When they broke apart, Match stepped back first, his composure restored but his eyes bright with suppressed emotion. "The perimeter will remain secure. The observatory will be maintained. We'll be ready when you come home."
"We know," Raj said simply. "That's what makes leaving possible."
Jeevika's projection flickered. [I will compile regular status reports. Updates on global meta-human affairs, technological developments, and Roy's continued attempts to improve my defensive protocols without understanding how they work.]
"I understand how they work!" Roy protested.
[You understand how to make them work. This is different.]
Kiran laughed through her tears, the sound bright and warm and heartbreaking. "Don't change too much while we're gone, okay? We want to recognise the place when we get back."
"Same goes for you," Roy said, trying for his usual cocky grin and almost managing it. "No coming back all cosmic and wise and above it all. I like you both better when you're just slightly above it all."
"Deal," Raj said, and meant it.
Each transition marked by rainbow light and dimensional barriers, showing glimpses of infinite worlds and the love that sustained them through impossible trials.
Earth-2
Golden Age heroes fought in Art Deco towers while shadows from the void between worlds clawed at reality's edges. Raj channelled the Speed Force through quantum mathematics, rewriting the fundamental constants that held the universe together, while Kiran anchored him with stories of their first meeting, her voice a lighthouse in the storm of infinite possibility.
When it was over, when the shadows retreated and the JSA's Earth was safe, Alan Scott offered them both a place in his emerald ranks.
"Thank you," Raj said, his hand finding Kiran's automatically. "But we have other appointments to keep."
Earth-10
Red skies stretched over a world where the worst impulses had won, where Superman wore a swastika and called it justice. They found the resistance in bombed-out London, human meta-humans fighting a war they couldn't win but wouldn't surrender.
Kiran rewrote propaganda broadcasts mid-transmission, her golden light interfacing directly with the Reich's communication networks to show the truth beneath the lies. Raj sat with dying children and sang Hindi lullabies while their world burned around them.
"How do you keep hope alive in a place like this?" one of the resistance fighters asked.
"The same way you do," Kiran replied, watching her light push back shadows that had ruled for generations. "One person at a time."
Earth-21
The celebrity superhero reality, where image mattered more than impact and public approval was the ultimate metric of heroic worth. Flash posed for cameras while people died in the background of his photo shoots.
"You don't understand," Wonder Woman explained over champagne at a charity gala. "We have to maintain our brand. Public trust is fragile."
"So are people," Raj replied, then disappeared for three hours to prevent a nuclear meltdown that would never make the evening news. When he returned, Kiran was teaching the Trinity about the philosophical implications of performative heroism through interpretive dance that somehow made more sense than most academic papers.
By the end of their stay, Earth-21's heroes had quietly restructured their entire approach to public service. The cameras still rolled, but now they filmed actual help instead of staged rescues.
Earth-12
Neo-Gotham's cyberpunk future, where Terry McGinnis fought corporate dystopia in a Batsuit that ran on hope and attitude. The city's AI achieved sentience and promptly decided Kiran was a mythic anomaly requiring termination.
She responded by arguing with the entire internet and winning, her consciousness interfacing directly with digital reality to explain the philosophical implications of free will through pure conceptual mathematics.
"Your girlfriend just convinced the city's brain to fall in love with existence," Terry said, watching Kiran teach Gotham's digital consciousness about the beauty of imperfection through dance that translated into code.
"She has strong opinions about autonomy," Raj replied, fixing temporal paradoxes in the city's historical databases while making coffee in Terry's kitchen.
By morning, Neo-Gotham's AI had developed its first crush and was writing terrible poetry about golden light and the meaning of choice.
Earth-30
The Red Son reality, where Superman ruled from the Kremlin with iron compassion and perfect order. No crime, no poverty, no freedom, no choice. Utopia built on the grave of human agency.
The philosophical debate lasted three days in Moscow's Red Square, broadcast to a world that had forgotten how to disagree with authority. Superman argued for order, for safety, for the greater good achieved through controlled outcomes. Raj countered with chaos theory and the mathematics of love.
On the third day, Kiran simply shared a memory—not through words, but through direct quantum entanglement of consciousness. Raj's mother singing while she cooked, her voice carrying love and loss and hope for a son who would grow up to save worlds. Nothing grand or cosmic, just a moment of perfect human imperfection.
Superman wept then, remembering his own mothers—both of them—and the child he'd been before the weight of worlds taught him to control everything.
"I wanted to protect them," he whispered.
"Protection without choice isn't protection," Kiran said gently. "It's just another kind of cage."
Earth-19
Victorian London, where steam and magic had birthed horrors that fed on industrial despair. Plague-fog rolled through gaslit streets while alchemists tried to transmute human suffering into immortal power.
Raj rewrote the city's leylines with mathematical precision, turning mystical energy into healing light that poured from every streetlamp and chimney. Kiran hijacked a blood ritual mid-incantation, reversing its power structure to heal months of accumulated death magic.
When the fog finally broke, London's survivors found messages written in golden light across every surface: "Tomorrow is possible. Hope is a choice. You are not alone."
Earth-11
The gender-reversed world, where Wonder Man's divine council ruled with compassionate authoritarianism that stifled freedom in the name of protection. It was their hardest fight—not because the enemy was strong, but because their intentions were genuinely good.
The debate lasted weeks, conducted in front of billions while reality itself listened. Kiran spoke about love that trusted rather than controlled, about protection that empowered rather than limited.
"You want to keep them safe," she said, golden light pulsing with each word. "I understand that. But safety without agency isn't life—it's just a very comfortable death."
Wonder Man listened with divine wisdom, finally recognizing wisdom in return. By the end, Earth-11's pantheon had restructured itself around cooperation rather than control.
Earth-22
Kingdom Come. The apocalyptic future where old gods fought new ones while humanity cowered in between. Raj caught a nuclear device mid-detonation—not with his hands, but with probability itself, convincing the universe that critical mass was just a suggestion.
Kiran shielded dying gods, her golden light wrapping around Superman and Wonder Woman and the others as they finally learned to step back and trust humanity to choose its own path.
When it was over, when the new world began to take shape, Clark offered them both places in whatever came next.
"Thank you," Raj said. "But we have somewhere else to be."
Superman smiled—the first genuine smile they'd seen from him. "Home?"
"Each other," Kiran said simply, and Clark understood.
Earth-50
The WildStorm universe, where chaos reigned and Jenny Quantum sat in chains forged from crystallized possibility. The Authority had fallen, reality was coming apart, and hope was a four-letter word nobody dared speak.
They found Jenny in a seven-dimensional prison, guarded by creatures that fed on potential futures. Kiran told her stories—not of their adventures, but of Earth-16, of young heroes who chose to be better than the world that made them.
Jenny listened with the intensity of someone hearing hope for the first time. When Kiran finished, the girl looked at her crystallized chains and said, "These are stupid."
Reality reasserted itself around Jenny's refusal to accept impossibility. Sometimes the most powerful magic was just saying no to things that claimed to be inevitable.
Earth-13
The Vertigo universe, where magic was real and terrible and every spell came with a price that compounded in blood and sanity. John Constantine chain-smoked in a London pub while the world ended for the fifth time that decade.
"You can't fix this," he said, exhaling smoke that tasted like despair and poor choices. "Magic always wins. Always takes more than it gives."
Kiran proved him wrong by rewriting the fundamental relationship between power and payment, her golden light serving as a cosmic credit system that let people borrow against hope instead of fear.
"Bloody hell," Constantine whispered, watching his cigarette burn clean for the first time in decades. "She just made magic... kind."
Raj fixed temporal loops with mathematical equations that turned causality into poetry. When they left, the Vertigo universe was still dark, still dangerous, but it was also, for the first time in its existence, fair.
Quantum space between dimensions, starlight and memory.
Ten years. Fifty-two worlds. Hundreds of crises averted, thousands of lives saved, millions of small moments where the universe chose hope over despair because two people from Earth-16 had been there to tip the scales.
They floated in the space between realities, quantum light playing around them like aurora, holding hands in a place where physics was negotiable and love was the only constant that mattered.
"Ready to see what home looks like after a decade?" Raj asked, his voice carrying harmonics from all the worlds they'd touched.
Kiran's smile was radiant, her golden aura mixing with his multicoloured aura to create new colors that had no names. "We've been home for ten years. Now we're just changing the address."
Rhode Island Coast, dawn breaking.
The dimensional barrier parted like silk, reality welcoming them back with the gentle sigh of pieces finding their proper places. The observatory materialized around them—not rebuilt, but reborn, shaped by their shared understanding of what home meant after a decade of being everywhere else.
For a moment, they just stood there on familiar ground, breathing air that tasted like saltwater and possibility. They looked older—not dramatically, but in the way, people looked when they'd learned to carry cosmic responsibility with grace.
Then the workshop door exploded open.
Roy hit them at a dead run, his mechanical arm whirring as he covered impossible distance in seconds. He collided with them both in a tangle of limbs and tears and laughter that didn't care about dignity or composure.
"Ten years," he sobbed into Raj's shoulder while his other arm crushed Kiran against his chest. "Ten years, four months, sixteen days. I counted. I counted every single—"
"We're here," Kiran whispered, her voice thick with emotion. "We're here now."
Match appeared more slowly, his pale features cycling through emotions he didn't have names for. When he reached them, he simply stood there for a moment, drinking in the sight of family returned.
"Perimeter secure," he said finally, his quiet voice rough with feeling. "No threats detected. Status... optimal."
Raj reached out and pulled Match into the embrace, and for a moment, the four of them just held each other while the sun rose over a world that had kept spinning in their absence.
When they finally broke apart, Roy wiped his eyes with the back of his hand, grinning through his tears. "Okay, okay, status report time. What did you do? How many worlds? How many—wait, are you taller?"
"Cosmic forces have no effect on height," Raj said solemnly, then ruined it by grinning. "But I might have better posture."
"Ten years of dimensional travel will do that," Kiran added, her feet touching solid ground for the first time in subjective decades.
Jeevika's holographic form materialized, her usually composed demeanor replaced by something that looked suspiciously like joy. [Welcome home. I have maintained optimal operational parameters in your absence, despite Roy's continued attempts at 'improvements.']
"My improvements work!" Roy protested.
[Seventeen-point three percent of the time. I have updated statistical data.]
"Some things never change," Raj said, his voice warm with affection.
"The important things don't," Match agreed quietly. "That's what makes them important."
Roy's expression grew more serious. "What was it like? Ten years out there?"
Raj and Kiran exchanged a look—ten years of shared experience compressed into a single glance of perfect understanding.
"Exhausting," Kiran said finally. "Beautiful. Terrifying. Worth it."
"We helped," Raj added simply. "Not just with the big crises, but with the small things too. Teaching people that hope is a choice, that power doesn't have to corrupt, that love can exist in any reality if you're willing to protect it."
"And now?" Roy asked, hope creeping into his voice.
"Now we're home," Kiran said firmly. "The Multiverse can find other guardians for a while. We have some living to catch up on."
Match nodded once, sharp and decisive. "Good. The world kept spinning, but it wasn't the same without you."
"What did we miss?" Raj asked, settling back into old rhythms with surprising ease.
Roy's grin was bright enough to outshine the sunrise. "Oh, where do I start? Remember how you broke Waller's entire conspiracy and proved heroes could be held accountable without being destroyed?"
"Vaguely," Raj said dryly.
"Right, well, turns out that was just the beginning. The Meta-Human Registration Act got repealed worldwide. Public opinion on heroes has never been higher. The Justice League restructured their entire accountability system based on the observatory's model. And get this—they named it the Nexus Protocol."
Raj blinked. "They what?"
"International standard for heroic accountability and transparency. Every major hero organisation now has to follow guidelines based on your work here. You're famous, man. Both of you."
Kiran looked alarmed. "Please tell me there aren't statues."
"There aren't statues," Roy said quickly, then paused. "There's a memorial garden. Very tasteful. Mostly roses."
"We're not dead!" Kiran protested.
"No, but you disappeared for a decade! People grieve! The garden has a plaque that says, 'Gone to help others, will return when the work is done.' Very poetic."
Match's lips quirked upward—the closest thing to a smile anyone had seen from him. "The garden is... nice. I maintain it."
"You've been maintaining a memorial garden for us?" Raj asked, his voice soft with surprise.
"Someone had to," Match said simply. "People needed a place to leave flowers."
Jeevika's projection flickered with what might have been amusement. [The garden receives approximately forty-seven visitors per day. Many leave handwritten notes expressing gratitude. Roy reads them aloud during maintenance hours.]
"You read our fan mail to an empty garden?" Kiran asked, torn between laughter and tears.
Roy's cheeks reddened. "It felt... I don't know. Like keeping you updated. Like you might hear somehow."
"We did," Raj said quietly. "Not the words, but the intention. Love carries across dimensions."
Observatory roof, ten years later, under familiar stars.
The rebuilt observatory's roof was exactly as they remembered it, but better—Roy had added improvements over the years, subtle touches that spoke of hope maintained across a decade of absence. Comfortable seating that adjusted to their preferences automatically. Jeevika's lighting painted everything in warm, welcoming tones. Small details that said "we never stopped believing you'd come home."
Raj and Kiran lay side by side on the platform, fingers interlaced, watching constellations they'd seen from fifty-two different angles paint familiar stories across Earth-16's sky. No uniforms tonight, no crisis alerts or emergency protocols. Just soft clothes and bare feet and the profound luxury of being completely, utterly safe.
"Do you miss it?" Kiran asked quietly, her voice barely louder than the wind through the crystal formations. "The other worlds? The constant movement?"
Raj extended his consciousness just enough to brush against the quantum foam between realities. The Multiverse hummed with its usual chaotic harmony, but it felt different now—more stable, more hopeful. Fifty-two worlds spinning in their cosmic dance, each one protected by heroes who'd learned to balance power with compassion.
"They're at peace," he said, his thumb tracing gentle patterns against her knuckles. "Like they're letting us rest."
"Good," Kiran said with fierce satisfaction. "We've earned some quiet."
Above them, Earth-16's stars painted stories of love and loss and hope maintained against impossible odds. In the distance, Roy's laughter echoed from the workshop where he was probably explaining his latest improvements to a patient, Jeevika. Match stood sentinel at the perimeter, pale guardian watching over sleeping peace.
"Do you remember the first thing you said to me?" Kiran asked, her voice carrying the lazy warmth of someone completely relaxed.
Raj's smile was audible. "I asked if you were okay. You'd just been thrown through a wall."
"And I said?"
"You said walls were negotiable, physics was a suggestion, and anyone who thought otherwise was welcome to provide a better argument."
Kiran laughed, the sound bright and free. "You looked so confused."
"You were glowing and arguing with gravity. I was young and impressionable."
"You were powerful and lost and trying so hard to be good that it hurt to watch."
"And you decided to help anyway."
"I decided you were worth the trouble," she corrected, turning on her side to face him properly. In the starlight, her eyes were dark pools touched with gold. "You turned out to be the kind of person who catches falling stars and turns them into night-lights. The kind who argues with gods and wins because you actually mean it when you say everyone matters."
Her hand moved to rest over his heart, feeling the steady rhythm that had anchored her through cosmic storms and dimensional chaos.
"You turned out to be someone who deserves to be loved," she finished softly. "And who knows how to love back without trying to fix everything. Just... love."
Raj lost in his mind
'She stayed. Through gods and tyrants and the spaces between worlds, when heroes have to remember how to be human. She stayed when I was cosmic force and stayed when I was just someone trying to help. And when we came home—really home, not just to a place but to each other—she asked me to marry her at exactly the same moment I asked her.
That's all the proof I'll ever need that some things are meant to be.
The Multiverse is vast and full of wonders, but I found my favourite one on a rooftop in Rhode Island, asking me to spend forever making sure that love and hope and choice remain possible, one world at a time.'
Raj's breath caught, his free hand coming up to cup her face with infinite gentleness.
Then they spoke simultaneously:
"Kiran, will you—" "Raj, would you—"
They stopped, laughed, tried again, and spoke in perfect unison:
"Will you marry me?"
The silence that followed was filled with wonder and joy and the kind of laughter that comes from two people discovering they've been thinking the same impossible thought.
"Yes," they said together, and the word carried the weight of ten years and fifty-two worlds and all the quiet moments in between.
"I love you," she said, the words carrying the weight of ten years and fifty-two worlds and all the quiet moments in between. "I love your terrible jokes and your impossible plans and the way you hum when you're happy."
"I love you too," he said, voice rough with emotion. "I love how you make everything better just by existing in it. I love how you stayed—through gods and tyrants and time itself, you stayed."
She kissed him then, soft and sweet and tasting like starlight and promises kept. When they broke apart, they stayed close, foreheads touching, breathing the same air.
"We should probably tell the others," Kiran murmured against his lips.
"In a minute," Raj replied, his hand tangling in her hair. "Right now, I just want to hold my fiancée and watch the stars celebrate."
Kiran's laugh was bright enough to outshine the aurora. "Fiancée. I like the sound of that."
"I love the sound of that," Raj corrected, and kissed her again.
"We have time now," Kiran whispered. "All the time in the world."
"What should we do with it?"
"Everything," she said, her smile bright enough to outshine the stars. "Absolutely everything."
Above them, the stars shimmered—unchanged, familiar, waiting.
And beneath them, hope bloomed where memory and promise held hands
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[A/N: WORD COUNT – 5230]
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