"Daizi, sweetheart," Zeinab cupped Daizi's face in her hands, doing her best to wipe away her tears, "I have known you since you were just a little baby. I was there the day you were born. I know that you are kind, and ambitious, and you've got the biggest heart out of anybody I know. You aren't a horrible, selfish person. You aren't any of those things. You just know what you need."
"No, I don't, Amty."
"You do, and you're brave enough to take it. You've always been brave enough to take it."
"No, I'm not brave."
"Yes you are, habibti."
"No, I'm not!" Daizi cried out, squeezing her hand around the fabric of her shirt, "I'm a coward. And I'm so ashamed of myself, and every day I'm just pretending. I'm really trying to be good, and to do better, but I don't and I can't because I'm not. My whole life people have doubted, and they've not trusted me, and it's always made me so angry, but they're right to. They're right not to trust me, because I can't trust myself, either. And I try," she touched her hands to her chest, "I try. But I f--- it all up. Again and again, and I want to do better, but then I just f--- it up in new ways, and I am so scared, and I am so ashamed."
Swallowing hard, Zeinab rested her chin on Daizi's head and shut her eyes, continuing to rock her, "What are you afraid of, Daizi?"
"No, I can't--" Daizi gasped, trying to move away, but Zeinab gently held her in place, rubbing her back to soothe her back down.
"You can tell me, baby." Zeinab promised, once more trying to dry her niece's tears, "I am never, ever going to judge you. There is nothing you can do to make me think poorly of you. I promise."
At the gentle words, Daizi cried harder, letting go of herself to instead cling to her aunt, and cried into her shoulder. When she could, she managed to say, "of hurting them."
"Of who? Your children?" Zeinab guessed softly.
"I've hurt them so many times," Daizi choked, "and they don't trust me enough to talk to me when they're hurting because I just... they know the truth about me, that I can't---Before Ivy was born, when I was in labour, I told Alec we were going to have Ivy call us Mama and Baba, and it hurt him so badly he thought we couldn't be a family anymore. And when Xander and I had our incident, I told him to go away, and he tried to run away from home, and just today, I was here, and I was crying, and Alec kept begging for me to stop, and I wanted to, but I couldn't. And now he's going to have to cope with that. I tried so hard to keep it together so I wouldn't upset him, but Baba is right."
"He's not right," Zeinab firmly corrected, "and those other moments---those aren't your fault, habibti. Not really. You're just doing your best, we're all just doing our best."
"I want them to love me like they love Dark, but they don't, and they can't, because they don't feel like they need to protect him. Because he's not weak. He's not fragile, but I am." She sobbed, hardly flinching when Zeinab's hands once more caressed her face, tucking loose strands of hair away, "I'm not enough. And I'm so scared of how I'll hurt my children next. I don't want to hurt them, but I just feel like there's something wrong and broken in me that makes it inevitable, like I'm the source of entropy."
"Daizi," Zeinab whispered, her heart breaking inside her chest, "Listen to me, baby, okay? Listen to me, Daizi. There is nothing wrong with you. Absolutely nothing."
"I'm so ashamed."
"Of what, habibti? Tell me, please," She kissed Daizi's forehead, "I want to help you."
"I love my children," Daizi stuttered, her sobs breaking up her words into small pieces, "I love them, and I wouldn't trade them. You have to understand how much I love them. I'd do anything for them, I'd die for them."
"I know you do, Daizi. Anybody could see that."
"But sometimes," She cried, feeling like the worst person alive, "Sometimes I wish it was just myself and Dark, still. I've wanted this for so many years and now I have it and even though I love them--I catch myself missing when it was just the two of us. I miss the fun we were able to have and I miss not being afraid all of the time, I miss feeling like I could breathe, I miss sleeping, I miss pushing him against the living room wall in the middle of the afternoon without worrying about who might walk in, and I miss knowing who I am. I know it's awful, I know it's disgusting, but I do, and I don't know myself, anymore. I want to be like you, Amty, I try to be like you, but I'm not as strong as you."
"Oh Daizi, ya haraam," Zeinab whispered, pulling Daizi in tight, "That's normal. Everybody feels that way, habibti. It's such a difficult adjustment, and you had to make it in ways that would terrify most people. You aren't disgusting, you don't have anything to be ashamed of. I promise you. When I was just becoming a mother, I felt that way too. You have to remember, Daizi, my sweet, beautiful girl, by the time you met me, I had already raised many, many babies. You're only two years into raising yours."
~~
Dark sighed softly, seeing his twins settled deeply on the couch, and then left the living room, shutting off the lights as he went. He thought about going outside to wait but instead went into the kitchen, poured himself a small glass of whiskey, and went upstairs to sit outside his bedroom door. For the second time in two nights, he listened in, but it didn't feel like it had the night before. The sounds of his wife crying watered down his drink and he desperately wanted to go inside, but in this moment, he had to trust that her aunt had her. If he believed anything, as he listened in, it was that she knew how to help in this instance better than he did.