Location: Infirmary Wing - P.R.C.U. Campus
Take On Me #3.041: Daybreak
Interaction(s): N/A
Gil’s phone buzzed quietly on the plastic tabletop of his bedside counter, sending small rattles through the arm attached to the frame of the bed and stirring him from sleep. He reached out blindly behind him, gingerly patting around for the offending object, and a series of unwieldy taps on what he assumed to be the screen’s surface soon achieved the desired cessation of interruption.
It was only then, his eyes still defiantly shut against the pressing appointment the alarm was predicated on, that Amma stirred slightly before him, and he remembered - with a far more alerting jolt than the alarm had provided - that she had spent the night. All of a sudden he was enveloped by her presence; the warmth radiating from her curled form beneath the blanket (a merciful separative curtain between them), the scent of her pluming up and around him, the ever-so-slight movements in the bedsheets from her sleeping twitches and cresting breaths.
She stirred, yes - but seemed to remain asleep, and Gil wasn’t sure whether to wake her. The infirmary attendants had been content to let him sleep late these past few days, the rest conducive to recovery; it wasn’t a stretch to think they’d allow the same for Amma, and it would likely only be when the first meal of the day was delivered that they might discover her absence from her assigned bed. Not that he doubted PRCU had ways of monitoring the whereabouts of their patients.
There was the aftermath to address, as well, the implications behind their conversation and the shared slumber, psychically intimate if not physically. Gil hadn’t dreamt, hadn’t returned to the night terrors of wax replicas and consuming faces. It had been a peaceful sleep, an abyssal rest, and the best he’d had since escaping the trial and being interred here on the ward. He suspected the awkwardness might sweep it out from underneath them, whatever it was, anyway - it seemed all connection between them flourished under the cover of dark, and he felt as if the harshness of daylight would blast away the kinship they’d found in the ethereal silver of moonlight. Perhaps he’d simply let her sleep, envious of her slumber, and they could…reconvene? Would she want to? Would he want to?
He looked down at her porcelain profile, gentle in sleep, eyelids fluttering. Yes. Yes he would.
The alarm buzzed again, and this time Gil picked up the phone entirely and switched it off, rather than snoozing as he’d inadvertently done so previously. He spared a second glance at Amma, but she remained unconscious, and at that he resolved not to interfere; if the alarm had failed twice, he wouldn’t presume to adjourn her rest unnecessarily. Instead, he swung carefully out of the bed, grabbing his crutches from where they leaned against the wall, standing with but a few scant moments of awkward balancing, and fishing clothes from the chair in the corner as he hobbled to the bathroom to change and relieve himself. Today he was getting his cast removed, a final session with the resident healers (who had spared as much of themselves for him as they could following the sabotaged trials, and were now encouraging a more natural healing process for the remainder), and a boot fitted to accompany some physical therapy. Ideally, he’d been told, he’d be discharged by the end of the day, provided he proved stable enough under his own power.
Perhaps Amma would need to visit him at his dorm. Perhaps he wouldn’t presume to think Amma desired a repeat. Perhaps he might entertain the reverie, though.
He slunk out of the room deftly and quietly despite the sticks propping him up, leaving Amma a lingering glance, a cooling space on the bed where he’d lain minutes before, and a text from his phone that read as follows:
It was only then, his eyes still defiantly shut against the pressing appointment the alarm was predicated on, that Amma stirred slightly before him, and he remembered - with a far more alerting jolt than the alarm had provided - that she had spent the night. All of a sudden he was enveloped by her presence; the warmth radiating from her curled form beneath the blanket (a merciful separative curtain between them), the scent of her pluming up and around him, the ever-so-slight movements in the bedsheets from her sleeping twitches and cresting breaths.
She stirred, yes - but seemed to remain asleep, and Gil wasn’t sure whether to wake her. The infirmary attendants had been content to let him sleep late these past few days, the rest conducive to recovery; it wasn’t a stretch to think they’d allow the same for Amma, and it would likely only be when the first meal of the day was delivered that they might discover her absence from her assigned bed. Not that he doubted PRCU had ways of monitoring the whereabouts of their patients.
There was the aftermath to address, as well, the implications behind their conversation and the shared slumber, psychically intimate if not physically. Gil hadn’t dreamt, hadn’t returned to the night terrors of wax replicas and consuming faces. It had been a peaceful sleep, an abyssal rest, and the best he’d had since escaping the trial and being interred here on the ward. He suspected the awkwardness might sweep it out from underneath them, whatever it was, anyway - it seemed all connection between them flourished under the cover of dark, and he felt as if the harshness of daylight would blast away the kinship they’d found in the ethereal silver of moonlight. Perhaps he’d simply let her sleep, envious of her slumber, and they could…reconvene? Would she want to? Would he want to?
He looked down at her porcelain profile, gentle in sleep, eyelids fluttering. Yes. Yes he would.
The alarm buzzed again, and this time Gil picked up the phone entirely and switched it off, rather than snoozing as he’d inadvertently done so previously. He spared a second glance at Amma, but she remained unconscious, and at that he resolved not to interfere; if the alarm had failed twice, he wouldn’t presume to adjourn her rest unnecessarily. Instead, he swung carefully out of the bed, grabbing his crutches from where they leaned against the wall, standing with but a few scant moments of awkward balancing, and fishing clothes from the chair in the corner as he hobbled to the bathroom to change and relieve himself. Today he was getting his cast removed, a final session with the resident healers (who had spared as much of themselves for him as they could following the sabotaged trials, and were now encouraging a more natural healing process for the remainder), and a boot fitted to accompany some physical therapy. Ideally, he’d been told, he’d be discharged by the end of the day, provided he proved stable enough under his own power.
Perhaps Amma would need to visit him at his dorm. Perhaps he wouldn’t presume to think Amma desired a repeat. Perhaps he might entertain the reverie, though.
He slunk out of the room deftly and quietly despite the sticks propping him up, leaving Amma a lingering glance, a cooling space on the bed where he’d lain minutes before, and a text from his phone that read as follows:
Gone to physical therapy. No dreams. Drop by again if you want to talk more about mending.
Thank you.