She had felt it whole, all connected, one continuous piece of peel, concealing pith and juicy flesh. Unique in its number of dimples, in the imperfection of its curve, the particular shade of its colour at a microscopic level, notes of tartness and sweetness ran out of the cut in its juices, down the skin, to her surrounding fingers all cool and sticky.
And for a moment, a frisson of panic shot through her.
just a fruit just a fruit just a fruit okayyyy
And she began to focus on it again, began to note the differences between this now, the present circumstance of the grapefruit, and its past as an uncut, digestible object. It might be as simple as reconciling the two, or as complex as rocket surgery (ha ha ha), but there was no way of knowing until she tried, and there was no chance of licking the light, syrupy juice from her fingers until she did. So she did, feeling the slit, the separation, and trying to will the Force - the Force, which was indeed at her command!... oh, so not comfortable - to make whole again what was not.
After all, if she couldn't mend a piece of fruit, what hope was there that she could heal something living, breathing, and bleeding? No, she didn't need to go there right now! Augh, focus, focus!
Sighing, looking forlornly at the cut, she closed her eyes, and refocused, directing the Force to the cut with one finger slowly running over it, while imagining the cut closing up, as if the process of slicing it open were happening in reverse. This was slightly taxing, an expenditure of her potential in the Force that had not been expressed before, but it was... it was starting to work! Which must have been very surprising to her, for she nearly dropped the fruit, only to catch it again before it hit the ground, her breath caught in her throat.
That breath was released as she looked over her work. Incomplete! Well, at least she knew she could do it now, so it was a matter of finishing the job, now! With that, the cut was thumbed over one last time, a little more power given to the mending, finally bringing the grapefruit back to its prior state of wholeness. Lia held the fruit up, giving it a closer look of intense scrutinization, just to be absolutely sure that she had done alright.
Then she held the citrus out to [member="Anders Sivas"] with one hand, and proceeded to lick the dried juice off of the fingers of the other.
"So, how'd I do?" she asked, less out of curiosity and a heck of a lot more because of a sore need for validation in the face of her fears, as she cleaned each finger with her tongue. "I don't think I murdered it."
At least that much was obvious! It was a fruit, already plucked from the plant on which it had grown, and thus, slowly decaying. Derr.