Anya
The hum of the engine felt impossibly loud in the aftermath, a soft, constant reminder that the world was still out there, spinning and not waiting for us to catch our breath.
I rested my forehead against the window, tracing the blur of streetlights with one tired finger.
My chest was still tight, still shaking in the best kind of way — the kind that came from finally letting go after holding yourself together for twelve hours straight.
His hand was on mine before I even realized I wanted it there.
Just resting lightly, warm against my skin, not insisting on anything more than the silent acknowledgment of presence.
I flexed my fingers against his, just once, and he squeezed back, a gentle pressure that made my shoulders finally unclench.
“I… didn’t realize how much I missed being taken care of,” I admitted, voice small and rough from exhaustion, the words spilling out before I could stop them.
I swallowed, heart tugging in a dozen directions.
The memory of him holding me against the sink a few weeks ago, rough and reckless in a way that made us feel like us, came back hot — and somehow softened by this quiet car, this safety.
“That day…” I began, voice catching, “…I felt like us, and then I had to go back to being… steady. Always steady.”
“Not anymore,” he said softly, voice low and steady, as if he meant every word. “Not when I’m with you.”
The city lights slipped past, and for the first time since the shift began, I let myself lean all the way against him.
My body didn’t have to be armor; my mind didn’t have to calculate every movement or anticipate every glance.
I could just be tired and human. And he could hold me, not as the injured man, not as the person I needed to keep safe, but as himself, steady and present for me in return.
By the time we pulled into his driveway, my eyelids were lead. We sat in the car a moment longer, just breathing, neither willing to release the fragile cocoon we’d built in the hum of the engine and the dim streetlights.
When we finally stepped inside, everything smelled like home — faintly of coffee, faintly of him.
I didn’t even think about taking off my coat; I just let him guide me to the couch.
My head rested against his chest, my arm draped lazily across his lap.
His hand moved to cradle my hair, careful around the spots that still felt sore from the prosthetic, careful everywhere.
“You can let me hold you,” he murmured, voice soft. “You don’t have to always be the strong one.”
“I… I’m not used to it,” I admitted, pressing my face into his chest. “And I feel guilty — like I should be able to handle everything on my own, like you’ve lost so much already and I…” My voice trailed off, thick with the weight of exhaustion and unshed emotion.
He tightened his grip. “I know what you’ve been carrying, too. And you’re allowed to lean on me. Always. That doesn’t make you weak. That makes you human.” His hand smoothed down my back. “Haven’t you been telling me that for months?”
I let out a long, shaky exhale and, for the first time that day — that week — allowed myself to feel all the tension, all the adrenaline, all the exhaustion bleed out into the space between us.
The couch creaked beneath us. My breath hitched once as his lips brushed my hairline, just soft enough to feel intimate without demanding anything.
“I’m sorry I went to HR without you, Anya. ”
“Des…”
He ran his fingers through my hair, just once. “No, I mean it. This is something we do together. From here on out, like it always should have been.”
We didn’t speak after that. Words weren’t necessary.
The quiet rhythm of our breathing, the weight of our bodies pressed together, the slow, sure pressure of his hands on my back and hair — it said everything.
We were here. Alive and whole and together.
And for a few glorious minutes, the world could keep spinning, but it wouldn’t touch us.
I let my eyes drift shut. For just this beat, I didn’t have to be ready for the next patient, the next crisis, the next moment of perfection. I just… exhaled. And he held me through it, like he promised he would.