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It wasn’t something Lam could claim that he
wanted to get used to. But it was still better if they both accepted it to a certain degree. Maybe someday his job would be no more than it had been on the tin. He could
hope for that. He vastly preferred being a teacher and a mentor. He didn’t
like leaving Rook alone to worry about him. He didn’t like seeing the dismay on his face when he came back injured. But the sorry truth was that he couldn’t skirt the press of expectation, either. Not with tensions and anomalies alike ramping up all around them.[break][break]
Granted, he tried to straddle the line now without getting in over his head. Rook anchored him in that way.[break][break]
Lam nodded slowly,
“Yeah, yeah. I think she is.” He was still worried about her, though. Of course he was.
robin coello had endeared herself like a snarky younger sibling.
“She’s only nineteen. She reminds me of Leif.” Well, not in personality, exactly. She and
Leif Logan weren’t really much alike at all.
“Well, in more of the little sibling way.” She shouldn’t have had to be out there. But he knew there was no stopping her, either.[break][break]
He took the gratefully, smiling.
“Dunno if I buy that, but good.” Rook at least looked far less anxious, and that was a win. He also did not look
mad and silent, which was an even bigger win.[break][break]
“Nope,” he agreed quickly, a wider smile stretching across his face.
“No one said that at all.” He sounded pretty persuasive under the exhaustion, right? Another kiss might do the trick, though he was quick to huff.
“Okay, okay, bossy pants.” He shot Rook a teasing look, but heeded the demand.[break][break]
Leaning to the side, he deterred just long enough to turn the shower knob on (high heat) before he peeled off the grimy layers of his jacket and shirt. He aimed for the hamper and the corner and half-missed. They caught the edge and hung, before plopping to the floor.
“Alright, I’m all yours,” he declared as he perched himself against the edge of the sink’s countertop.[break][break]
He hoped his voice was as playfully seductive as he was going for.[break][break]
Glancing back toward the mirror behind him, he frowned a little at the hint of bruising that he caught seeping out along his side. Stretched from his ribs toward his back in mottled blue and violet. The gash on his arm had mostly stopped stinging, though the skin was red and swollen there.[break][break]
But it was fine. It wasn’t
hospital worthy, he knew that much. And beyond that, he’d come to prefer Rook’s first aid much more than sitting in a triage room for hours.[break][break]
There were many more perks to this.[break][break]
Lam deflated somewhat, though, at the status of his gym.
“Thanks for checking on it,” he said, shooting Rook a limp half-smile,
“you didn’t have to do that.” He blew out a long breath,
“How much water damage?” He tried not to wilt too much, but it was likely obvious that the idea was…
upsetting. All that work he’d put in over the last year. That they
both had, even if the bulk of it had been repurposed from the previous gym leader.[break][break]
He barked out a tired laugh and sipped at his glass.
“Think it’s a bit more than a little, babe.” It was a reminder that Rook was just as stubborn despite the sweetness. That Rook was far more capable than Lam often realized. And a reminder that Lam shouldn’t take those things for granted. He reached up, letting his thumb skim against the curve of Rook’s cheek affectionately.
“Awfully daring of you, though.” [attr="class","oocnotes"]
— ;n; bingo prompt: anomaly