Noah
When Cassian’s voice finally ca out, it sounded completely ruined by three weeks of disuse.
It was low, gravelly, and much slower than his usual sharp delivery.
"Hospital," he rasped, the single word clearly costing him a massive effort. He paused, his eyelids fluttering once.
"Obviously."
A short, ragged noise ca out of my throat, sothing that was almost a laugh, though it felt too wet to be real.
"Yeah. Yeah, obviously."
Cassian’s eyes closed for three long seconds, then forced themselves open again, the strain visible in the tight lines around his temples.
"How long?"
"Almost a month," I said, keeping my voice very soft, very careful.
A heavy silence followed the statent. Cassian received the number without any dramatic movent; his face stayed perfectly flat as he processed the weight of thirty days vanishing from his life.
"A month," he repeated, speaking the words directly to the white ceiling tiles.
"Yes," I whispered.
He didn’t say anything else. His eyelids slid shut a final ti, and this ti, they didn’t open again. His breathing dropped into a deep, regular rhythm against the pillow.
I sat back down in the vinyl chair, the one that had learned the exact shape of my spine over the last three weeks, and I just watched the steady green numbers on the screen until the afternoon light faded from the glass.
The next few hours, the entire atmosphere of the third floor changed before the elevator doors even opened.
Charles Wolfe ca down the linoleum corridor with two large n in dark coats trailing a step behind him.
He carried that specific, heavy energy of a man who is entirely accustod to having rooms and hallways rearrange themselves the second he enters them.
I stood up from my chair as he approached, my back stiffening against the wall. It was the defensive posture I had learned to take every ti this man walked into a room, knowing exactly what his presence usually cost .
Charles stopped three feet away, his cold eyes moving over my face. The assessnt was brief and entirely unbothered.
"You look dreadful," he said. There wasn’t any cruelty in his tone; he was just stating a plain, undeniable fact, the way he would describe a dented fender on one of his town cars. "Go ho, son. Sleep. You’ve done what you could here."
The way he spoke those words, what you could made my stomach turn over. He said it as if my three weeks of sitting in the dark had been a small, polite gesture, a minor duty that had been appreciated but was now officially concluded.
"I’d like to stay until the later," I said, keeping my hands straight at my sides.
Charles didn’t even wait for to finish the sentence. He was already moving past my shoulder, his long coat brushing against my knee as he reached for the door handle.
"The specialists will handle his recovery from this point forward," he said without looking back. "His personal security will be doubled this morning. You should go."
I watched the wooden door swing open, revealing the bright room inside, and then it closed behind his back.
The two n in dark coats took up positions on either side of the fra, their arms crossed over their chests, their bodies blocking the glass pane entirely. It was the oldest ssage in the city, delivered by n standing in doorways.
I didn’t leave the building. I walked twenty yards down the hall, sat down in a different plastic chair near the fire exit, and pulled my knees up.
I wasn’t gone; I was just moved further down the line, waiting in the corridor because waiting was the only thing I had done correctly for three weeks, and I wasn’t about to stop now just because a Wolfe told to.
...
The next few days beca a strange, exhausting geography of the third floor.
Charles Wolfe was always there, an unmoving weight in the center of the room, which ant I was pushed completely to the periphery.
I was only allowed near the bed when Charles left the building for his afternoon etings, and the second his town car pulled back into the courtyard, I was steered back into the hall by the n in the dark coats.
But Cassian’s recovery was visible every ti I managed to slip past the door. Day by day, the gray cloudiness in his eyes retreated further, replaced by that sharp, cold processing I knew so well.
His focus was sharper each afternoon, his eyes tracking my movents the second I set my bag down on the floor.
But there was sothing else in his gaze now, sothing I had never seen before the accident.
Even in those brief ten-minute visits, I noticed a strange shadow behind his pupils.
It looked like sothing that had been dragged very close to the surface while he was asleep, sothing terrible and painful that he was now forcing himself to push back down into the dark, inch by painful inch, through sheer force of will.
I didn’t na it. I didn’t say the word grief out loud, but I saw it in the small cracks between his expressions.
It was that flat, hollow nothingness that appeared on his face the exact second he thought nobody was looking at him, a dead look that stayed until he noticed my shadow on the wall and forced his features back into order.
I didn’t ask him about it. I didn’t ask him why he had been calling out that na in the dark. I just stayed present whenever the guards let through the fra, and I went back to the seat near the fire exit when they didn’t.
The waiting had beco my only real expertise.
On the fourth morning, one of the guards from the door walked down the hall and stopped right in front of my seat.
I had my laptop open on my knees, trying to handle the departnt logs, but I looked up the second his boots stopped on the linoleum.
"Mr. Wolfe is asking for you," the man said simply. He didn’t wait for to answer; he just turned on his heel and started walking back toward the private room.
Sothing opened up in my face before I had the ti to clamp it back down. I didn’t even bother closing the laptop properly, just shoving it onto the plastic cushion behind as I scrambled to my feet, my heart doing a strange, frantic dance against my ribs as I followed his dark coat down the corridor.
We reached the private ward, and the guard held the door open for .
Inside, a nurse was just wrapping up her blood pressure check. She looked up as I entered, collected her chart from the hook, and walked straight past into the hall, leaving the door to click shut behind her. She was giving us the room.
Cassian was propped up against a mountain of white pillows, the head of the bed elevated so he was sitting nearly upright.
The clear tubes were still taped to his skin and the machines were still pulsing beside his shoulder, but the gauntness in his face couldn’t hide the change in the room.
The very quality of the air felt different before I had even taken three steps inside.
Cassian’s eyes found the fra the exact second the wood moved, his gaze tracking my boots with an imdiate, terrifying accuracy.
The cold, brilliant intelligence was fully back behind his pupils, watching with the full, heavy weight of being Cassian Wolfe.
My stomach did sothing incredibly complicated.
For nearly a month, I had been sitting beside a silent body that drew breath but was entirely absent from the world.
Now, the actual person was back inside the skin, looking straight through from across the sheets with that sharp, unyielding attention that made my entire nervous system tighten up.
The door gave a soft click as the latch caught, leaving the two of us alone in the silence.
I stayed near the entrance, my hands hooked into the pockets of my jacket, while Cassian just watched from the pillows.
Neither of us seed to know how to begin the conversation after thirty days of dark.
"Are you planning to stand there by the light switch?" Cassian said. His voice still didn’t have its full, booming strength, but the flat, dry tone was completely recovered. "Or are you going to stare at from a safe distance indefinitely, Noah?"
My mouth opened, then closed again like a fish. "You’re..." The words wouldn’t form properly in my throat, jumbling into a ssy heap. "You sound exactly like... you’re really awake."
Cassian raised his right eyebrow just a fraction, the sharp line of his brow moving up his forehead. "Awake? Yes. I’ve been awake for four days now, Noah. I am entirely aware that it happened."
A noise ca out of my chest... a sharp, rough sound that wasn’t entirely a laugh. It was the sound of sothing heavy and cracked finally breaking completely open after a month of being sealed behind my ribs.
I crossed the room. I didn’t do it slowly, and I certainly didn’t do it with any dignity; I just stumbled across the linoleum until my boots hit the side of the tal fra, my arms reaching out and wrapping around his shoulders before the thinking part of my brain could tell it was a terrible idea.
I threw both of my arms around his neck, pulling him into a hard, desperate hug. I tried to be careful because of the stitches and the lines, but my hands were shaking so violently that I couldn’t manage it.
My chest was heaving against his hospital gown, the fabric slling of antiseptic and starch.
The breath was knocked right out of him, an audible gasp leaving his throat as my weight hit his chest. "Noah—"
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