Lyra Ventor
Character
For a heartbeat, she couldn't breathe.
Maker above, four days. Four days with him saying things like that. Four days with him, touching her as if she were something worth tracing by memory.
Her fingers curled reflexively where his hand had just been, the warmth of it lingering against her skin like the faintest imprint of heat. She should have stepped back. She should have put distance between them before she did something reckless—but all she managed was a shallow exhale and a half-second of staring at his mouth again like some starstruck idiot.
Her voice came out softer than she intended, wrapped in something unsteady and wholly involuntary:
"You…really don't hold back, do you?"
She tried to sound teasing. Tried. It came out more like breath, trying to anchor itself.
His compliment—all of your beauty…every inch—hit her like a blow she wasn't braced for, leaving her pulse fluttering in her throat and a shakiness in her knees she refused to acknowledge. No one had ever spoken to her like that—not without an angle, not without a line attached, not with this strange, disarming sincerity that made her feel seen in a way she wasn't prepared for.
When he loosened his hold, she didn't pull away immediately. Her hand lingered against his for an extra second, not enough to be obvious, just long enough to give away far more than she wanted.
Finally, she exhaled and stepped back a careful half-pace, trying to gather enough distance to think again.
"…Food sounds good," she managed, pushing her hair behind her ear as if that would help her regain any composure at all.
"Better than nutrient paste. Better than, uh…Whatever I was doing before, I completely lost my mind just now."
She swallowed, her gaze dipping once—traitorously—to the scars on his torso before snapping back up.
"And for the record…You don't have to try that hard to be memorable," she added, quieter, the words slipping out before she could stop them. "I'm… not going to forget this."
Her pulse jumped again, hot and insistent.
"…Or you."
She didn't wait for the consequences of admitting that—she turned toward the small galley, pretending she had complete command of her heartbeat, her thoughts, and her suddenly very unstable ability to walk in a straight line.
But the faint, breathless smile tugging at her lips gave her away completely.
Syn
Maker above, four days. Four days with him saying things like that. Four days with him, touching her as if she were something worth tracing by memory.
Her fingers curled reflexively where his hand had just been, the warmth of it lingering against her skin like the faintest imprint of heat. She should have stepped back. She should have put distance between them before she did something reckless—but all she managed was a shallow exhale and a half-second of staring at his mouth again like some starstruck idiot.
Her voice came out softer than she intended, wrapped in something unsteady and wholly involuntary:
"You…really don't hold back, do you?"
She tried to sound teasing. Tried. It came out more like breath, trying to anchor itself.
His compliment—all of your beauty…every inch—hit her like a blow she wasn't braced for, leaving her pulse fluttering in her throat and a shakiness in her knees she refused to acknowledge. No one had ever spoken to her like that—not without an angle, not without a line attached, not with this strange, disarming sincerity that made her feel seen in a way she wasn't prepared for.
When he loosened his hold, she didn't pull away immediately. Her hand lingered against his for an extra second, not enough to be obvious, just long enough to give away far more than she wanted.
Finally, she exhaled and stepped back a careful half-pace, trying to gather enough distance to think again.
"…Food sounds good," she managed, pushing her hair behind her ear as if that would help her regain any composure at all.
"Better than nutrient paste. Better than, uh…Whatever I was doing before, I completely lost my mind just now."
She swallowed, her gaze dipping once—traitorously—to the scars on his torso before snapping back up.
"And for the record…You don't have to try that hard to be memorable," she added, quieter, the words slipping out before she could stop them. "I'm… not going to forget this."
Her pulse jumped again, hot and insistent.
"…Or you."
She didn't wait for the consequences of admitting that—she turned toward the small galley, pretending she had complete command of her heartbeat, her thoughts, and her suddenly very unstable ability to walk in a straight line.
But the faint, breathless smile tugging at her lips gave her away completely.