The Shadow of Csilla
Shade acknowledged his answer with a single nod.
No relief, no visible satisfaction. Just acceptance that the thread had been picked up and would not be dropped again.
"When we get to my home," she said quietly, breath controlled as she completed the last repetition, "I'll give you my notes. We can compare timelines and identifiers."
It was not framed as a promise or a future plan. It was simply the next step, stated as fact.
The final exercise ended with a sharp exhale she did not quite manage to smooth away. Her arm trembled faintly as she eased it back into rest, irritation flickering across her expression before being reined in. She sat still for a moment, letting the edge pass rather than feeding it.
"That's enough for today," she said, more to herself than anyone else.
The therapist stepped in again, checked the readings, and made a note on the datapad. "You pushed right up to the limit without crossing it," they said calmly. "That's exactly where you should be."
Shade accepted that with another nod, then reached for her coat with her left hand and stopped. The movement stalled halfway, the reality of the sling making itself known again. She did not curse. She did not sigh. She simply looked to Cassian. "Help me," she said evenly.
As he moved closer, she turned her attention back to the therapist.
"When can the sling come off," Shade asked, practical and direct.
The therapist glanced at the chart. "Not yet. Another week at least. We want consistent motor return before we reduce support. We'll reassess after your next two sessions."
Shade absorbed that without visible reaction.
"Understood," she replied.
Cassian helped guide the coat over her shoulders, careful and attentive. She adjusted what she could one-handed, movements precise despite the limitation. When it was settled, she straightened, posture reclaiming its familiar alignment.
"Let's go," she said quietly.
Not rushed. Not delayed. Just ready to keep moving.
Cassian Abrantes
No relief, no visible satisfaction. Just acceptance that the thread had been picked up and would not be dropped again.
"When we get to my home," she said quietly, breath controlled as she completed the last repetition, "I'll give you my notes. We can compare timelines and identifiers."
It was not framed as a promise or a future plan. It was simply the next step, stated as fact.
The final exercise ended with a sharp exhale she did not quite manage to smooth away. Her arm trembled faintly as she eased it back into rest, irritation flickering across her expression before being reined in. She sat still for a moment, letting the edge pass rather than feeding it.
"That's enough for today," she said, more to herself than anyone else.
The therapist stepped in again, checked the readings, and made a note on the datapad. "You pushed right up to the limit without crossing it," they said calmly. "That's exactly where you should be."
Shade accepted that with another nod, then reached for her coat with her left hand and stopped. The movement stalled halfway, the reality of the sling making itself known again. She did not curse. She did not sigh. She simply looked to Cassian. "Help me," she said evenly.
As he moved closer, she turned her attention back to the therapist.
"When can the sling come off," Shade asked, practical and direct.
The therapist glanced at the chart. "Not yet. Another week at least. We want consistent motor return before we reduce support. We'll reassess after your next two sessions."
Shade absorbed that without visible reaction.
"Understood," she replied.
Cassian helped guide the coat over her shoulders, careful and attentive. She adjusted what she could one-handed, movements precise despite the limitation. When it was settled, she straightened, posture reclaiming its familiar alignment.
"Let's go," she said quietly.
Not rushed. Not delayed. Just ready to keep moving.