Character
Ironwraith didn't argue.
He gave a small, almost tired smile at her words, the kind that came from recognition rather than humor. "Yeah," he said quietly. "Seen too many people crash and burn because they don't know when to stop. Push too hard, too long… then wonder why everything falls apart."
He shifted his weight, armor giving a soft, familiar creak. "Brightest flames burn the quickest," he added. "Looks impressive right up until there's nothing left but smoke."
He didn't reach for the datapad. Didn't even look like he was tempted. Instead, he stepped back, giving her the space to finish closing up, trusting the process the same way he trusted her hands.
A few minutes later, the workshop door hissed shut behind him.
Outside, the corridor was dimmer, quieter, less alive than the shop had been. He stood off to one side, helmet tucked under one arm as he rolled his shoulders and stretched his back, vertebrae popping faintly beneath scarred muscle. The motion was slow, deliberate. Necessary.
He waited.
Not pacing. Not checking the time. Just leaning there, breathing, letting the hum of the station fill the gaps where urgency usually lived. When she finally emerged, lights dead behind her and the shop properly asleep, his gaze lifted to meet hers.
"No rush," he said simply. "Figured I'd walk with you."
There was no pressure in it. No expectation. Just presence.
And for once, that felt like enough.
Ana Rix
He gave a small, almost tired smile at her words, the kind that came from recognition rather than humor. "Yeah," he said quietly. "Seen too many people crash and burn because they don't know when to stop. Push too hard, too long… then wonder why everything falls apart."
He shifted his weight, armor giving a soft, familiar creak. "Brightest flames burn the quickest," he added. "Looks impressive right up until there's nothing left but smoke."
He didn't reach for the datapad. Didn't even look like he was tempted. Instead, he stepped back, giving her the space to finish closing up, trusting the process the same way he trusted her hands.
A few minutes later, the workshop door hissed shut behind him.
Outside, the corridor was dimmer, quieter, less alive than the shop had been. He stood off to one side, helmet tucked under one arm as he rolled his shoulders and stretched his back, vertebrae popping faintly beneath scarred muscle. The motion was slow, deliberate. Necessary.
He waited.
Not pacing. Not checking the time. Just leaning there, breathing, letting the hum of the station fill the gaps where urgency usually lived. When she finally emerged, lights dead behind her and the shop properly asleep, his gaze lifted to meet hers.
"No rush," he said simply. "Figured I'd walk with you."
There was no pressure in it. No expectation. Just presence.
And for once, that felt like enough.