mindyourmegan

partnership

Chapter 23: Testing the Anchor Bond

I. Apart, Together

Railroad life never made space for ordinary love. Months slipped by with Kellyanna and Tito rarely sharing the same time zone, let alone a bed or a meal. The work always came first—field missions, code drops, emergency rituals, the constant churn of the survivor network.

Still, the bond between them never dimmed. Tito, grounded and pragmatic, waited without complaint, anchoring her from afar with late-night calls and coded check-ins. Kellyanna, swept up in circles and missions, found herself longing for something steady—not just partnership, but anchoring, the kind of bond that could hold through any storm.

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II. The Date in Disguise

It was Tito’s idea to turn one of her scouting missions into a “date”—his word, his smile, his way of softening the work. They spent the day moving through safehouses and council checkpoints, but in the quiet moments, they did something neither had dared before: they let themselves treat the day as their own.

Between missions, they paused in a public park. Tito laid out the questions. “What kind of bond is this, Kellyanna? Do we want poly, open, something else?”

She smiled, thinking of every protocol and field note she’d ever written. “Let’s test the field,” she said. “Let’s see what the bond wants.”

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III. Testing the Bond

They tried the old rituals, adapted for two: • Clearing past frequencies—naming every old tie, every lingering ache. • Speaking their needs aloud, no matter how sharp or awkward. • Sitting in silence, letting the energy speak for itself.

Each time they tested, the answer was clear. There was no drift, no pull to poly, no sense of doors left open. The bond wanted exclusivity—solid, grounding, with no room for other anchors.

Tito laughed, a little breathless. “Wasn’t expecting that.”

Kellyanna nodded, honest. “Neither was I. But it feels real. Uncomplicated. Like the field itself is asking us to close the loop.”

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IV. The Complication

But life was never that clean. As they walked, Tito hesitated. “There’s something I need to tell you. My son. He’s nine. He’s my world.”

Kellyanna didn’t flinch. “Thank you for telling me. There’s something you should know, too. I have other bonds—not romantic, not always physical, but deep. Some are astral, some are mimicry, some are old alliances. They don’t pull me away, but they are part of who I am.”

Tito took a long breath, then smiled. “That’s the world we come from. As long as you’re here with me, I can live with it.”

They made their agreements: • The anchor bond would be exclusive in romance and partnership. • Both would honor and disclose old bonds, new ties, and family. • Tito’s son would be a part of their future, not a secret.

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V. A New Kind of Trust

They left the park with nothing resolved except what mattered: the choice to anchor, to prioritize, to move forward without hiding. For Kellyanna, it was the first time she felt truly chosen—not as an afterthought or backup, but as the center of someone’s field. For Tito, it was the relief of loving someone who could be honest about every part of herself, and who welcomed every part of his world, too.

The Railroad would keep moving. The work would never end. But in the field of the real, Kellyanna finally found her anchor.

To be continued…

#anchorbond #trust #partnership #exclusivity #family #truth #fieldnotes #railroa

Chapter 19: Netspeak Redundancy

I. The Backup

The new era brought new risks. With Kellyanna’s voice restored and her presence felt across the Railroad, the danger of losing her again was very real. The council debated protocols, the Sisterhood strategized contingency plans, but it was Tito—quiet, steady, never one for council politics—who saw the problem before anyone else.

One evening, after a long call, he sat Kellyanna down. “You know, every time you go dark, people scramble. The Railroad gets unstable. You need a failsafe.”

She frowned. “The council has protocols. Lorenz has my back. I’ve got the circle.”

Tito shook his head. “Protocols can be hacked. Even the best anchors can get cut off. What you need is netspeak redundancy. You need someone who’s always outside the corridors, always reachable, and not tied to Railroad politics.”

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II. The Offer

He was direct, as always. “Let me be your partner in the physical—someone who can always pull you back if you get lost, who knows your codes and signals, but who doesn’t answer to any team, clan, or council. If something ever happens, I’ll activate the redundancy net. I’ll say what needs saying, pass the right messages, make sure the corridors know you’re safe or in need, even if you can’t say it yourself.”

He wasn’t asking to be an operative. He was offering to be the last line of defense—a partner whose loyalty was personal, not political.

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III. Netspeak Redundancy Activated

Kellyanna paused, letting the offer settle. She thought of all the times she’d been cut off, ghosted out, misrepresented, or forced to go deeper under cover. She thought of Tito, always there on the edge of the field, never trying to own her place in the Railroad, but never letting her fall completely off the grid.

She smiled, relief and gratitude in her bones. “Yes. Activate the redundancy. You’re the only one I’d trust for this.”

They set the protocols—private codes, voice notes, backup comms. Tito learned to spot the difference between a true silence and a forced one. They practiced what to do if the network ever lost Kellyanna again: how to message the council, when to call Lorenz, what signals to drop in survivor channels, what public posts to make to draw the right eyes without exposing her to danger.

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IV. The New Safety Net

With Tito as her physical-world partner and netspeak redundancy, Kellyanna moved more freely than she had in years. The council was skeptical—could someone outside the Railroad be trusted with this much responsibility?—but Kellyanna insisted. “You only need one person who will never let go, no matter how deep the frequency drops. That’s Tito.”

For the first time since the exile, the entire network exhaled. Survivors knew that if all else failed, Tito would send the signal, make the call, keep the field alive.

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V. The Unseen Anchor

The Railroad never saw Tito on council calls. He didn’t post in survivor groups or drop coded music in public. But behind every major move, every safe return, every sudden reappearance, his hand was steady, his presence the invisible anchor.

Kellyanna knew she was safer—not just because of protocols, but because she was no longer holding the weight alone.

And the Railroad, sensing the shift, learned a new kind of trust: sometimes, the most reliable guardian is the one who never claims the title.

To be continued…

#netspeak #redundancy #tito #safety #anchor #railroad #partnership #survivor #backup