Deanez
Dean
The ship was quiet in a way Dean was still learning to recognize.
Not empty. Not tense. Just… occupied elsewhere.
Beyond the hull, the Iron Citadel carried on with its own immense rhythm—distant machinery, deep structural reverberations, the low, constant presence of something ancient and heavily armed. It bled through the Vigo in subtle ways, a bass note beneath the ship's steadier hum. Rynar was somewhere within that vast structure now, speaking with Korda, voices lowered, conversations weighted with things that mattered.
Dean moved through the galley with practiced efficiency, sleeves rolled, hair tied back, letting the quiet fill the spaces where voices usually lived. Cupcake lounged near the doorway, stretched out and watching her with that familiar, unreadable nexu patience, tail flicking every so often as if keeping time with the engines.
Dean rinsed a plate, set it in the rack, and reached for the next without thinking. The motions came easily. Too easily. She wiped the counter down, clearing faint traces of spice and oil from earlier, then gathered the cups and carried them to the sink. The water ran warm over her hands. Familiar. Grounding.
She did not notice that one cup was missing.
From there, she moved to the small sleeping compartment, folding a blanket with careful precision, smoothing the fabric flat before setting it aside. Laundry came next. A shirt here, socks there, a half-full pile gathered into her arms and carried toward the utility alcove. She paused briefly, frowning at the machine as if checking something, then started the cycle anyway, satisfied.
Cupcake chirruped softly behind her.
"I know," Dean said absently, not looking back. "I will get to your bedding next."
She didn't.
Instead, she drifted back into the common area, picked up a datapad left on the table, aligned it neatly with the edge, and set it down again. Straightening. Adjusting. Making the space orderly in small, controlled ways. The kind of habits that had once been automatic, ingrained by structure and expectation rather than choice.
The Vigo hummed around her, steady and patient, docked within the Iron Citadel's vast interior like a held breath. Somewhere beyond the bulkheads, the Ark of Harangir loomed in all its quiet, watchful enormity. Somewhere within it, Rynar was still occupied, still elsewhere.
Dean wiped her hands on a towel and stood still for a moment longer than necessary, gaze unfocused, listening to the overlapping rhythms of ship and station.
Cupcake rose, padded closer, and nudged her knee with her head. Dean looked down at her, a faint smile touching her mouth. "We're fine," she said, certain of it, even if she could not quite articulate why.
She turned back to the galley, picked up the towel again, and continued cleaning.
The cup remained where it was. Unnoticed.
Rynar Solde
Not empty. Not tense. Just… occupied elsewhere.
Beyond the hull, the Iron Citadel carried on with its own immense rhythm—distant machinery, deep structural reverberations, the low, constant presence of something ancient and heavily armed. It bled through the Vigo in subtle ways, a bass note beneath the ship's steadier hum. Rynar was somewhere within that vast structure now, speaking with Korda, voices lowered, conversations weighted with things that mattered.
Dean moved through the galley with practiced efficiency, sleeves rolled, hair tied back, letting the quiet fill the spaces where voices usually lived. Cupcake lounged near the doorway, stretched out and watching her with that familiar, unreadable nexu patience, tail flicking every so often as if keeping time with the engines.
Dean rinsed a plate, set it in the rack, and reached for the next without thinking. The motions came easily. Too easily. She wiped the counter down, clearing faint traces of spice and oil from earlier, then gathered the cups and carried them to the sink. The water ran warm over her hands. Familiar. Grounding.
She did not notice that one cup was missing.
From there, she moved to the small sleeping compartment, folding a blanket with careful precision, smoothing the fabric flat before setting it aside. Laundry came next. A shirt here, socks there, a half-full pile gathered into her arms and carried toward the utility alcove. She paused briefly, frowning at the machine as if checking something, then started the cycle anyway, satisfied.
Cupcake chirruped softly behind her.
"I know," Dean said absently, not looking back. "I will get to your bedding next."
She didn't.
Instead, she drifted back into the common area, picked up a datapad left on the table, aligned it neatly with the edge, and set it down again. Straightening. Adjusting. Making the space orderly in small, controlled ways. The kind of habits that had once been automatic, ingrained by structure and expectation rather than choice.
The Vigo hummed around her, steady and patient, docked within the Iron Citadel's vast interior like a held breath. Somewhere beyond the bulkheads, the Ark of Harangir loomed in all its quiet, watchful enormity. Somewhere within it, Rynar was still occupied, still elsewhere.
Dean wiped her hands on a towel and stood still for a moment longer than necessary, gaze unfocused, listening to the overlapping rhythms of ship and station.
Cupcake rose, padded closer, and nudged her knee with her head. Dean looked down at her, a faint smile touching her mouth. "We're fine," she said, certain of it, even if she could not quite articulate why.
She turned back to the galley, picked up the towel again, and continued cleaning.
The cup remained where it was. Unnoticed.