Character
He ate because she asked him to.
Slowly, deliberately, as if each bite was something that needed to be relearned. The food tasted better than he expected, real, solid, and he found himself surprised by how quickly his hands stopped shaking once his body realized it was allowed to keep it. He drank the water the same way, measured and careful, grounding himself in the simple act of swallowing, of staying upright, of existing without consequence.
When he finished, he stood again.
The armor felt heavier now that he'd worn it for more than a few minutes. Not physically, mentally. Like it remembered everything he'd carried into Bastion with it, and everything Bastion had tried to carve out of him in return. He exhaled slowly, then reached for the seals at his chest and shoulders.
The clasps came undone with soft clicks.
Plate by plate, he removed the upper half, setting it aside without ceremony. No reverence. No rejection. Just acknowledgment. When the chestplate came free, cool air brushed against exposed skin, and he felt the ache beneath it immediately, dull, deep, and real. He didn't flinch from it. He let it exist.
He sat.
The bench pressed firm against his back, and for a moment he simply stayed there, shoulders slightly hunched, hands resting on his thighs like he wasn't entirely sure what to do with them. The bruises along his ribs had darkened into layered constellations of purple, blue, and sickly yellow, evidence of days he still couldn't fully sequence in his mind. Some were older than others. Some still hurt when he breathed too deeply.
He glanced up at her then, not asking, not apologizing.
Just… offering.
There was a vulnerability in sitting like this that felt worse than being interrogated. Armor off. Guard down. No deflection left. He swallowed once, jaw tightening, then forced himself to breathe through it.
"Guess this is the part where I stop pretending," he muttered, more to himself than to her. His thumb brushed absently along one of the darker bruises, not probing, just confirming it was real. "Feels worse when I'm still."
A dry huff of a laugh escaped him, short and humorless. "Figures."
He didn't look away when she moved closer. Didn't tense when her presence filled the space beside him. He trusted that now—maybe not fully, maybe not cleanly, but enough.
"I'll sit still," he added quietly, after a moment. Not a promise. An effort. "Just… tell me if I need to breathe different."
His shoulders eased a fraction, like giving her this much, this sight, this access, had already taken some of the pressure off his chest.
For the first time since Bastion, he wasn't bracing for what came next.
He was letting someone help.
Deanez
Slowly, deliberately, as if each bite was something that needed to be relearned. The food tasted better than he expected, real, solid, and he found himself surprised by how quickly his hands stopped shaking once his body realized it was allowed to keep it. He drank the water the same way, measured and careful, grounding himself in the simple act of swallowing, of staying upright, of existing without consequence.
When he finished, he stood again.
The armor felt heavier now that he'd worn it for more than a few minutes. Not physically, mentally. Like it remembered everything he'd carried into Bastion with it, and everything Bastion had tried to carve out of him in return. He exhaled slowly, then reached for the seals at his chest and shoulders.
The clasps came undone with soft clicks.
Plate by plate, he removed the upper half, setting it aside without ceremony. No reverence. No rejection. Just acknowledgment. When the chestplate came free, cool air brushed against exposed skin, and he felt the ache beneath it immediately, dull, deep, and real. He didn't flinch from it. He let it exist.
He sat.
The bench pressed firm against his back, and for a moment he simply stayed there, shoulders slightly hunched, hands resting on his thighs like he wasn't entirely sure what to do with them. The bruises along his ribs had darkened into layered constellations of purple, blue, and sickly yellow, evidence of days he still couldn't fully sequence in his mind. Some were older than others. Some still hurt when he breathed too deeply.
He glanced up at her then, not asking, not apologizing.
Just… offering.
There was a vulnerability in sitting like this that felt worse than being interrogated. Armor off. Guard down. No deflection left. He swallowed once, jaw tightening, then forced himself to breathe through it.
"Guess this is the part where I stop pretending," he muttered, more to himself than to her. His thumb brushed absently along one of the darker bruises, not probing, just confirming it was real. "Feels worse when I'm still."
A dry huff of a laugh escaped him, short and humorless. "Figures."
He didn't look away when she moved closer. Didn't tense when her presence filled the space beside him. He trusted that now—maybe not fully, maybe not cleanly, but enough.
"I'll sit still," he added quietly, after a moment. Not a promise. An effort. "Just… tell me if I need to breathe different."
His shoulders eased a fraction, like giving her this much, this sight, this access, had already taken some of the pressure off his chest.
For the first time since Bastion, he wasn't bracing for what came next.
He was letting someone help.