Cassian followed her without a word, not because he didn't have any, but because he understood what silence was doing here making room. Shade's hand in his felt steady, unquestioning, and it struck him again how rare that was: not her ability to be certain, but her willingness to share certainty with someone else.
Crossing the threshold into the adjoining room, he felt it immediately. The air was different, cooler, cleaner, disciplined. Not sterile. Maintained. The kind of space built for readiness and kept for survival.
His eyes moved the way they always did, out of habit more than suspicion. He took in the weapons mounted with immaculate alignment, the ranged pieces secured with low-profile clamps, the armor components resting where they could be reached in seconds. A worktable worn by careful use, not neglect, tools laid out like an extension of her hands. There was nothing performative about it. No trophies. No indulgence. Just the honest infrastructure of someone who had lived too long in the reality of consequences.
This wasn't a room designed to impress anyone. It was a room designed to keep her alive.
Cassian's chest tightened, not with fear, not with jealousy, but with a sober understanding of what it took to be Shade in the world they inhabited. He'd known it abstractly. He'd seen it on missions, in the way she moved, the way she listened, the way she never wasted a gesture. But seeing the home of those habits, seeing how much of her life was built around preparedness, hit differently.
Then she stopped at the wall.
Cassian watched her thumb find the concealed contact point, watched the panel slide aside with a muted whisper, and his attention narrowed without him meaning it to. Not tactical now. Reverent. His breathing slowed as the recess revealed itself, deliberately narrow, deliberately hidden. A place you didn't show unless you meant it.
When the soft blue light bloomed to life, it painted everything in a cool, steady glow that felt older than technology. Not dramatic. Not pleading for awe. Just…present.
And inside, Cassian's breath caught, quiet and involuntary.
A still image. A family portrait. Not the kind curated for public consumption, but the kind preserved because it anchored something real. Faces composed, eyes luminous, posture formal without feeling hollow. A lineage captured cleanly, without spectacle.
Beneath it, the older token rested like a sealed promise.
Cassian didn't move for a second. His mind, trained for threat analysis and contingency, stilled as if the room itself demanded it. He felt the weight of what she was offering, the way her words framed it: not something that demanded attention, but something acknowledged only by choice. When I return. When I leave. When something changes.
Tonight mattered.
He swallowed once, slow, and forced himself not to fill the silence with the wrong kind of reaction. This wasn't a place for charm. It wasn't a place for reassurances that sounded too easy.
His gaze flicked to Shade, not to pull her away from the recess, but to read her face, the faint softening around her eyes, the steadiness in her shoulders. She was sharing history without surrendering herself to it. Inviting him close without handing him the steering wheel.
Cassian exhaled softly, a breath that felt like a vow he didn't need to announce loudly.
"I understand," he said at last, voice low, careful, like he was handling something fragile that could never be replaced.
"Why you keep it hidden. Why you only light it when you choose."
He looked back at the portrait, letting himself truly see it, not just as an artifact of origin, but as evidence of the person she had been before the Agency, before the wars, before the blood and the calculus. Evidence that Shade wasn't made in a vacuum. She came from somewhere. Someone.
His hand drifted toward his chest without thinking, fingers resting briefly over the inner pocket where the token she'd given him lay. The newer crest against his heart, now mirrored by the older one in the recess.
His voice tightened slightly, not with emotion spilling over, but with it settling deeper.
"This is… sacred," Cassian said quietly, choosing the word with intention.
"Not in a religious sense. In a you sense."
He turned his head toward her, meeting her eyes again. There was no flinch in him, no attempt to lighten the moment. Just truth.
"I won't treat this like access," he said.
"Or leverage. Or a privilege I get to throw around when it suits me." His jaw set, resolve sharpening into something unmistakable.
"And I won't ever put you in a position where you regret showing me."
A beat passed, the blue light steady between them.
He glanced back to the portrait once more, then asked, softly, respectfully.
"Can I?" He lifted his hand slightly, not reaching into the recess, not touching anything yet, just asking permission the way he would with something that truly belonged to someone else.
"Not to take it. Just…to acknowledge them the way you do. The way you meant."
Cassian's gaze returned to her, then his eyes flicked once to the portrait, the token, the quiet blue glow
"This is worth remembering."
He pressed his palm lightly over his chest again, over the token she'd given him, and held her gaze.
"I know what this means," Cassian said, steady as bedrock.
"And I will never forget this day."