Night arrived gradually, without announcent.
Zane did not notice it at first.
His head still rested in Willow’s lap, her fingers moving through his hair in slow, steady passes that had quieted him more effectively than any dication ever had. His breathing had evened out without his permission, his body surrendering to the simple certainty of being held. When she finally stilled her hand and shifted beneath him, it was careful, deliberate, as though she were easing him back into the world rather than pulling away.
"Co on," she murmured softly. "Let’s get up before you fall asleep like this."
He opened his eyes reluctantly, disoriented for a mont by how calm he felt.
"Unfair," he said quietly.
She smiled. "Temporary rcy."
She helped him sit, waiting until he was steady, then rose with him, their movents unhurried and practiced already. By the ti they reached the kitchen, the light beyond the glass had softened, the city dimming into a scatter of lights that no longer demanded attention. Inside the penthouse, lamps replaced daylight in small, deliberate pools, the kind chosen for comfort rather than display. The space felt altered now that the day had finished asking things of them.
Willow stood in the kitchen, sleeves rolled, hair pulled back loosely, moving through tasks that did not require thought. She opened the refrigerator and reached for the covered dishes stacked neatly on the middle shelf, each labeled in Lorrlyne’s precise handwriting.
Zane watched from the counter, seated rather than standing, as instructed and respected without comnt.
"She planned this," he said.
Willow smiled faintly. "She planned the next three days too. I’m fairly sure there’s soup in there for ergencies we haven’t had yet."
"She always assus catastrophe."
"She calls it preparedness," Willow replied. "She once packed snacks for a five-minute drive."
He considered that. "That explains a lot."
She set the containers out, lifting lids carefully, steam rising as she transferred them into the oven, adjusting temperatures she had morized long ago. It was dostic in a way that did not feel staged, the quiet intimacy of doing sothing ordinary after weeks of disruption.
"What is it," he asked.
"Chicken and rice," she replied. "Vegetables you will pretend you don’t like. Soup you will admit you need."
"I like vegetables."
"You tolerate vegetables," Willow corrected. "You like bread and argunts."
He tilted his head. "She’s ruthless."
"She’s thorough."
The oven humd to life, filling the space with warmth that felt earned rather than imposed. Willow moved around the kitchen easily, aware of him without monitoring, comfortable enough now to let the mont breathe.
When she handed him a glass of water, their fingers brushed, the contact brief but deliberate.
"Sit," she said. "I’ll bring it to you."
"I can manage," he replied.
"I know," she said. "Sit anyway."
He sighed, exaggerated. "I am being oppressed in my own ho."
"You’re being supervised," she said calmly. "There’s a difference."
They ate at the small table by the window rather than the formal dining space, the city stretched below them like a quiet witness. Willow served him first, portions asured without making a point of it, then sat across from him with her own plate.
The food was simple and grounding, the kind made to sustain rather than impress. Zane ate slowly, conscious of pacing, of listening to his body without resenting it. Willow watched once, then looked away, trusting him to stop when he needed to.
"This is good," he said.
"She’ll be pleased," Willow replied. "Lorrlyne worries food doesn’t taste the sa after hospitals."
"It does," he said. "It just matters more."
That earned him a look. "You’re thinking again."
"Yes."
"Careful."
He smiled, the expression tentative but real. "I’ll pace myself. One profound realization per al."
"Two," she said. "But no epiphanies after dessert."
They finished without rush, the silence between them easy now, threaded with sothing lighter than it had been earlier. Willow cleared the plates and returned with tea, setting the cups down before sitting beside him on the sofa rather than across the room.
The closeness was unremarkable at first.
Their shoulders touched lightly, the contact registering without demand. Willow leaned back into the cushions, exhaling in a way that suggested she had finally allowed herself to stop holding the day upright.
Zane reached for the remote and switched the television, abandoning whatever had been playing for sothing slower, less demanding. The sound softened, more background than focus, images flickering without insisting on attention.
They sat like that for a while, the television murmuring to itself, the quiet companionable rather than empty.
"I need a few minutes," Willow said eventually. "I’ll be right back."
He glanced at her. "You sure?"
"Yes," she replied. "Don’t move."
"That sounds familiar."
She smiled faintly and disappeared down the hall. The door to the bedroom remained half open, the soft, rhythmic hum of the pump audible but unobtrusive, a practical sound folded into the evening rather than interrupting it.
Zane stayed where he was, reclined against the cushions, the television playing on. He did not reach for his phone. He did not feel the urge to stand. The stillness held.
When Willow returned, she moved straight to the refrigerator, setting the container inside before rejoining him on the sofa. She settled back into the sa place she had left, close enough that her knee brushed his thigh.
"That wasn’t long," he said.
"It never is," she replied. "It just feels longer if I rush."
She leaned back again, their shoulders touching, her presence resuming its place as if it had never been absent. Zane adjusted instinctively, an automatic accommodation that surprised him with how natural it felt.
"You’re going to sleep," he said after a while.
She opened one eye. "Eventually."
"You say that like a negotiation."
"I’m weighing my options," she replied. "Sleep versus pretending I’m still productive."
"You haven’t been productive in hours."
"Lies," she said. "I reheated food and kept you from standing up unnecessarily."
"Heroic."
She smiled, small and unguarded. "I do what I can."
At so point, Willow’s head tipped gently against his shoulder, the movent unconscious enough that it did not feel like a decision.
Zane stiffened briefly, then relaxed, adjusting carefully so she could settle without strain. Her hair brushed his collarbone, warm and familiar, and the simple reality of it made sothing loosen in his chest.
"You okay," she asked softly, eyes still closed.
"Yes," he said. "You’re warm."
"Good," she murmured. "I refuse to apologize for that."
Later, in the bedroom, the lights were kept low, the routine unhurried. Willow moved with quiet efficiency, setting his dications on the nightstand, checking tis without comnt. Zane sat on the edge of the bed, watching her with an expression that held gratitude without asking for acknowledgnt.
When she turned down the covers, she paused.
"You don’t have to," he said.
"I know," she replied. "Move over."
He did.
They lay side by side, not touching at first, the space between them intentional and respectful. Willow reached for the lamp, dimd it further, and settled onto her back, hands folded loosely over her stomach.
For several minutes, neither spoke.
Then Zane shifted, carefully, and Willow felt it imdiately.
"Too close," she asked.
"No," he said. "Too far."
She huffed softly. "You’re impossible."
"dically fragile," he corrected. "Emotionally stubborn."
She considered that, then rolled toward him, her arm draping lightly across his waist, careful of pressure, mindful of balance. He responded by turning onto his side, their foreheads nearly touching, their legs fitting together naturally.
The contact was tentative, exploratory, as though they were relearning sothing familiar under new rules.
Willow’s breath hitched when his hand rested at her back, warm and steady.
"This is okay," she said.
"Yes," he replied. "But if I start coughing dramatically, ignore ."
"I absolutely will not."
"Rude."
"At least you’ll be alive to complain," she said.
The quiet that followed was not heavy.
At so point, sothing shifted, the tension that had been coiled for weeks unwinding in a way that surprised them both. Willow laughed softly, the sound unguarded and sudden, and Zane blinked.
"What," he asked.
"You’re holding like I might break," she said, amused.
"No, you’re right," he replied, voice dry. "I nearly did."
She laughed again, quieter this ti, pressing her face into his chest. "You’re ridiculous."
"Recovering," he corrected.
She nudged him lightly. "Don’t push it."
They adjusted, found a rhythm that felt safe, his arm around her shoulders, her leg hooked loosely over his. The position was intimate without being urgent, comforting without performance.
Willow yawned, the sound small and unselfconscious.
"Sleep," he said.
"Then you stay awake," she countered.
"I’m allowed to rest," he replied.
She smiled against him. "Fine. We’ll compromise. You sleep. I’ll pretend to."
The room settled.
Outside, the city continued its restless movent. Inside, the penthouse held sothing quieter, sothing newly fragile and unexpectedly light.
Zane drifted toward sleep with the steady weight of Willow beside him, the warmth of her body anchoring him in a way no machine ever had.
For the first ti since illness had forced stillness upon him, rest did not feel like surrender.
It felt like ho.
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