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Chapter 2 - The Shape Before Sight

She knew the shape of him before her eyes caught

up.

Her body named him first: weight, heat, the

exact geometry of those shoulders.

Arms wrapped her before the concrete

could. Solid, warm through uniform cloth, holding like her body remembered what

to do even when the mind didn't.

His forearms were iron until the last inch,

where his hands trembled once and then went still.

"Got you," he said, quiet.

The words brushed her ear and, under them, a tiny catch, like a gear slipping a tooth.

Her palms hit his chest. Nothing moved. She

pushed, pushing was the only thing still hers.

Under her hands, his breath against bone, then

flat into discipline.

"You're alive."

"Why would you do this to me."

The words came out broken, not a question so much as a leak in a hull.

Around them the crowd surged and thinned and

surged again, a tide chewing its own shoreline. Rose didn't see it. She saw

jawline, the shallow shadow under it, a thin new scar at the hinge. Hair the

right black, now threaded with wrong silver. Zack's face, older in impossible

ways.

For a breath, the mask slipped; grief flashed

raw and unarmored in the set of his mouth, then locked back in place.

Then the eyes.

Not the warm, night-drenched dark she'd leaned

toward on Devil's Maw rooftops. These were cold river after thaw, glass rinsed

until every other pigment had been scoured out.

They didn't soften, only blinked too slowly, as

if holding back a flood.

Her relief lit and died so fast it left

afterimages. The void rushed in.

"Caellum," she rasped. "You're alive. Why would you do this to me."

His name struck him, physical pain; she felt the flinch move through his chest, small as a bird's.

Her gaze kept jumping over his shoulder to the

ship ramp, to that dark mouth where a familiar smirk should break the world's

spell. Any second. Come out. Make it a joke. Please.

His grip eased a fraction, as if to let her go

to the hope he couldn't give back, then firmed because he knew she'd fall.

He didn't move. Not a blink.

"I'm sorry," he said. Airless words. No place

for hope to hang.

The apology scraped him on the way out; she

could hear it.

He let one second pass, long enough for hope to

peak and hold—and then cut the cord.

"He's gone."

 

The floor tilted. Sound narrowed to a high,

needling whine. Breath thinned.

Against her ear, his heart stumbled. One uneven beat, then the metronome of control.

'He promised.'

'He promised me.'

'Say anything else.'

She tried to go around him. Legs failed in a

soft, ridiculous way, like she'd been poured into a girl shape and it hadn't

set. She stumbled; he steadied her without changing expression.

Not quite true. His jaw ticked, a single pulse of muscle betraying the effort not to look away.

"No," she said, hating the way her voice frayed.

"You are like him, your face with those joke, tell me you're lying. Tell me he's coming down that ramp and you're both idiots."

He didn't answer with words. He stepped into her

fall and closed his arms. Not comfort. Containment.

His hand found the back of her head and hovered

there a breath too long before settling, as if asking permission his voice

couldn't.

"It's not a prank," he said into her hair. His

chest thudded against her ear too fast, as if his heart hadn't learned the day

was over. "I'm sorry."

The last syllable thinned. For an instant he

pressed his mouth to her crown without quite touching, like blessing and apology both.

Something inside her let go the way a rope lets

go after too much weight. The sound that tore loose wasn't speech. It scraped

her throat raw on its way out.

He tightened once around her, a reflex like

bracing under falling stone.

Her hands balled in his uniform. She hit him

once. Again. Again. The blows thudded against muscle and bone.

He took them. He did not block. His shoulders

lowered a millimeter, as if offering the hits somewhere softer.

'You liar.'

'You said in one piece.'

'Bring it back. Bring it back.'

The strength ran out fast. Punches collapsed

into a hold. Fingers locked and stayed because there was nothing else to hold.

Her face was wet and hot and graceless. She didn't care. Dignity belonged to

places without ships and lists.

His knuckles whitened at her spine, then

loosened; he made himself breathe with her, slow, slow, lending rhythm to lungs

that had forgotten how.

He didn't offer words to plug the hole. He

anchored. His chin settled on the crown of her head. His breath hauled in and

out like he was pulling it by hand. Sweat. Metal. Salt. The clean sting of

antiseptic somewhere nearby. The station's lights hum-singing through concrete.

Beneath the metal tang was something stubbornly human. Soap and the faintest curl of smoke, as if he'd stood too close to heat for too long.

Devil's Maw flashed up, unhelpful and whole:

warm midnight, roofs they weren't allowed on, the night crowding so close the

stars felt like breath. Zack's eyes, very dark, catching every shard of light

and keeping it. Promise spoken too lightly at first, heavier when she made him

say it again. I'll come back to you. I'll be there to save you every time. The

warm drag of his palm ruffling her hair like a brand.

Under her cheek his throat moved around a name

and swallowed it.

"You promised."

"I left because you promised."

Around them, the noise dulled by degrees. A

woman's voice broke to pieces and tried to keep screaming anyway. Boots

hammered metal, orders broke and fell flat. The ship breathed out heat and

silence.

His shoulders squared at each new wail, then

sagged back that stolen millimeter when it passed.

Her body found rhythm again. Breaths started to

stack instead of scatter. The shake in her arms softened. She could feel the

wet cooling on her face, the warmth of it still sinking into his shirt.

He felt it too. She felt the flinch when the

fabric chilled against his skin, the way he drew her closer anyway.

Don't look up.

Don't look.

Look.

She made herself lift her head.

The face was the same in all the ways that

mattered to memory: the mouth that tilted when he was about to dare her, the

cheekbone she'd traced with a fingertip once and pretended not to, the nose

she'd sketched in the margins of lessons she didn't hear. All of it matched.

And the smallest fracture ran through it now. A grief line fine as glass, crossing the place where a smile used to start.

And then the thing that turned memory into a

weapon.

His eyes were blue—shocking, scoured.

They widened, just once, like impact, then set.

She watched him force the tide back behind that color.

Air left her in a sound smaller than words. The

world tipped again. He didn't let her fall. He held her in the hinge of a

moment that refused to close.

For a heartbeat, his forehead leaned toward

hers. Gravity, not choice, before he pulled it back an inch and made the

distance.

That was where the day ended for her: on a face that matched the one she had begged the sky to give back, and on a pair of eyes

that said it had not.

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