A soft rustle of fabric broke the stillness, pulling Holly from the last paragraph of her book. She blinked up, heart hammering with the old fear that Ariel might not wake, that this moment might only ever be memory. But then she saw Ariel stirring gently against the hospital pillow, eyes fluttering open with a dreamy, unfocused gaze.
Ariel’s hand had never let go of Holly’s through the long night. Now, with a small, conscious squeeze, she reminded Holly she was still there.
“Hey,” Holly whispered, setting the book aside, leaning in until her face was the first thing Ariel saw. “Welcome back.”
Ariel turned her head with effort, her eyelids heavy and raw. Her tired green eyes met Holly’s and softened instantly. “Hey,” she croaked, voice little more than a strained, broken whisper.
Without thinking, Holly reached for the water cup on the tray and gently offered the straw to Ariel’s lips. “Sip slow,” she murmured, brushing a wayward strand of red hair from Ariel’s forehead, feeling the heat still clinging to her skin.
Ariel sipped a little, then let her head fall sideways, her gaze never leaving Holly’s.
“Sleep okay?” Holly asked softly, voice caught somewhere between hope and worry.
Ariel nodded, faint and slow. “Yeah. I think so.”
A quiet pause drifted between them, full of the hush and hum of the hospital room. Ariel took the moment to really look at Holly, her gaze moving over the curve of her cheek, the purpled shadows beneath her eyes, the exhaustion etched into every line of her face. She saw how Holly’s shoulders were rounded, her eyelids heavy but fighting to stay open, her lips pressed together as if holding back a tide of worry. Concern flared in Ariel’s chest, sharper than anything she’d felt all morning.
“Holly,” she whispered, her thumb brushing gently over Holly’s knuckles. “You look so tired. Have you slept at all?”
Holly tried for a reassuring smile, but it wobbled at the edges. “Not really. Didn’t want to miss anything. I was scared I might wake up and you’d be gone.”
Ariel’s heart twisted. She squeezed Holly’s hand a little tighter, her own gratitude tangled up with guilt. “You have to take care of yourself too, you know. I need you here. But I need you okay, too.”
Holly’s eyes softened, glassy with relief and love. “I’ll rest soon. I promise. Just… let me stay a little longer.”
Ariel nodded, letting her thumb keep moving in small, soothing circles. For a moment she just took in Holly’s tired, beautiful face, silently promising herself to make space for Holly’s care, too. Her anchor and her witness, unwavering even as her own heart trembled.
Holly finally spoke, “You feeling alright? Lungs any better?”
Ariel inhaled carefully, as if testing her own body’s boundaries. “Still tight,” she admitted. “Like there’s weight on my chest. But not scary. Just… heavy.”
“That’s normal,” Holly said, trying to pour every ounce of encouragement into her words. “They’ll help you through it. You’re doing amazing, Red.”
Ariel’s lips managed a faint, grateful smile.
Holly shifted, her thumb tracing slow circles along Ariel’s knuckles. She looked down, gathering courage. “I’ve been thinking,” she said, voice low. “Your apartment has, what… fourteen stairs?”
“Fifteen,” Ariel corrected, groaning at the thought of stairs.
“Right,” Holly replied, warmth growing in her eyes. “Well, I don’t think your lungs are gonna love that. Not for a while.”
Ariel’s brow furrowed, worry tugging at her features. “You think I shouldn’t go home?”
Holly shook her head gently. “I think you should come home with me. Just until you’re stronger. Just until you’re ready.”
Ariel blinked, and in her silence, there was no resistance. Just the stunned hush of someone who has been offered a harbor after a shipwreck.
“I already had Jordan check my place for anything that might be a trigger. No candles, no incense, I had him swap out any flickery bulbs. Ginger tea is ready.” Holly’s voice was half-joking but her eyes were bright with concern. “The couch pulls out, if you want your own space. But, obviously, I’d prefer you shared my bed.”
The joke was gentle, but the invitation was real. Ariel stared, unable to find words.
“You really want me there?” she asked, voice trembling with more than exhaustion.
“I want to take care of you,” Holly said. “You’ve done enough alone, Red. Let me be here for you now.”
Ariel’s eyes shone with unshed tears, overwhelmed by the promise in Holly’s voice. She swallowed, and after a long pause, let her gaze drift away. "You know what's kind of funny?" Ariel whispered, voice soft and strange. "My mom is still listed as my emergency contact here. She hasn't come. She hasn't even called." Her voice trembled at the edges. Not angry, just deeply tired, old wounds surfacing through the new ones. "The nurse asked if I wanted to change it, but... I didn't. I think I just left it because it was always supposed to be her, wasn't it?"
She forced a shaky smile, glancing up at Holly again. "Guess I'm not the kind of daughter you come running for, even after something like this."
Stolen novel; please report.
Holly’s face tightened, her jaw clenching with a sudden, protective anger. "Hey," she said, voice thick and low. "Don’t you ever think that. This isn’t about you not being enough. This is about her not knowing how to show up, how to love you the way you deserve. If she can’t see how incredible you are, that’s on her. Not you."
She squeezed Ariel’s hand fiercely, her thumb rubbing slow circles across knuckles smudged with the last of the soot. "You’re the kind of person anyone would be lucky to run to. You hear me? I’m here. I’ll always come running."
Ariel’s gaze lingered on Holly for a long, silent moment. She tried to find words for the swell of emotion inside her: a mix of gratitude, disbelief, longing, and the strange, aching comfort of finally being defended. The way Holly looked at her now, fierce and unwavering, made something deep in Ariel’s chest crack open. Her eyes shimmered. She squeezed Holly’s hand again, needing her to feel just how much she meant it.
“You’re incredible, you know that?” she whispered, voice thick and reverent, as if the truth of it could anchor them both.
Holly’s smile trembled. “I’ve been told. Mostly by this gorgeous, soot-smudged girl I found in a hospital bed.”
Ariel’s laugh was soft, almost weightless, and quickly turned to a cough. Holly was at her side instantly, one hand steady on her arm until Ariel’s breathing slowed again.
“Okay,” Ariel managed at last, her voice quiet but sure. “I’ll stay with you.”
Before Holly could answer, the door creaked open and a nurse entered, clipboard in hand, smile gentle.
“Good, you’re awake,” she said softly. “Time for your first round of respiratory therapy. Nothing strenuous. Just breathing exercises and a little time on the spirometer.”
Ariel nodded, and Holly stood, squeezing her hand as she did.
“Want me to wait outside?” Holly asked, searching Ariel’s face for even the smallest flicker of distress.
“No,” Ariel said quickly, holding tighter. “Stay. Please.”
“Then I’m not going anywhere.”
The nurse rolled a tray closer, setting the spirometer in place, her voice calm and steady. “We’ll start slow. Inhale through your nose, count of four. Exhale through your mouth.”
Ariel closed her eyes and tried to follow, chest lifting, then falling with a quiet, wheezy sigh.
“Good,” the nurse encouraged. “Again.”
Holly stayed at her side, hand a silent lifeline. For a few cycles, Ariel managed, if just barely. Every inhale was a measured act of will, her fingers clutching at Holly’s with each breath, as if drawing strength from the anchor at her side. Holly murmured encouragement in a low, steady voice, her thumb moving in endless circles over Ariel’s knuckles. Sometimes she would count aloud, quietly matching the nurse’s rhythm, and Ariel would focus on that: Holly’s voice, the feel of her skin, the pressure of her hand, the reality of this room and not the one her mind threatened to pull her back into. After each cycle, Ariel’s eyes would flick to Holly’s, searching, grounding herself in the gentle certainty there. It was only the knowledge that Holly was there, watchful and unwavering, that kept her breaths steady at all.
Then the nurse lifted the spirometer. “Let’s try this now. Just inhale through the tube and keep the ball up as long as you can.”
Ariel nodded, placed the mouthpiece to her lips, and began to breathe in.
The ball floated, then her lungs caught. A jagged, dry hitch. She coughed, violently. The device slipped from her grasp as she hacked into her elbow.
Holly tensed, grip tightening around Ariel’s hand, eyes darting in fear.
Then it hit: A faint, sharp scent. Acrid. Burned paper. Melted varnish. Smoke. Stirred up from deep within her lungs as she coughed.
Ariel froze, pupils blown wide. Her breath went ragged. The hospital receded. She was somewhere else, the memory ripping her backward.
She was back in the fire. Back in the bookstore. Trapped.
“No… no… no…” she whimpered, her body shrinking in on itself.
Scorch marks on tile. Charred ink. Air thick as gasoline. Flames roaring at the front of Foxglove & Fir. Every detail fed back, cruel and merciless.
Then she screamed.
Holly was beside her, hands on Ariel’s face, voice trembling but sure. “Ariel. Ariel, look at me.”
Ariel shook violently, her whole body trembling, gaze wild and unfocused. "No, please," she whimpered, voice catching on every syllable. "I can't...I'm still there...it's so hot...I can't breathe, Holly, I can't..." Her breathing hitched in panicked gasps, tears streaming down her cheeks, hands clutching for anything real.
"Red, please. Eyes on me. Just look at me," Holly pleaded, desperate to pull Ariel out.
Ariel tried, but her vision blurred; the fire was everywhere. "I can't see you! I can't...I'm trapped..!"
For a moment, Ariel was lost, caught in a nightmare she couldn't wake from. But then Holly pressed her forehead to Ariel’s, voice fierce and shaking. “The eyes you said were beautiful. The ones you couldn’t stop staring at.”
A pause, a heartbeat.
“They’re still here. I’m still here,” Holly whispered. “You’re safe. I’ve got you. The fire’s gone. I won’t let it touch you.”
Their eyes met: Ariel’s green, wide with terror, and Holly’s, shining with love and fear. In that instant, the world snapped back into focus. The hospital room returned, though everything still trembled at the edges. Ariel stared into Holly’s eyes for a heartbeat, as if testing whether this anchor was real, whether she could let herself believe it.
The tension broke. A shuddering sob tore loose from Ariel’s chest. She collapsed forward, all her weight pouring into Holly’s arms, clutching her as if she might fall straight through the world. Holly’s arms closed around her with fierce tenderness, rocking her gently.
Ariel pressed her face into Holly’s shoulder, breath coming in ragged gasps. “Why is this happening to me?” she sobbed, her voice torn and bewildered. “It’s like I’m stuck there. Like I run, and it still finds me. I don’t know how to get out, Holly. I’m so scared.”
Holly held her tight, heart breaking at every tremor in Ariel’s body. She stroked Ariel’s hair, murmuring quietly, “I know, sweetheart. I know. But you made it out. You’re safe. I promise, I’m here. You’re not alone. Not ever.”
Ariel wept, deep and raw, her fists knotted in Holly’s shirt, desperate for any anchor to keep from sinking. Every sob was a wave crashing through her, body shuddering. She wanted to apologize but the words tangled in her throat.
“I hate this,” she managed at last, voice thin and wrecked. “I hate that you have to see me like this. I hate that I’m so… broken right now.”
Holly pressed a lingering kiss into Ariel’s hair, letting her lips rest there a moment. When she spoke, her voice was soft, fiercely caring. “You don’t have to be ashamed, Red. Not with me.”
She pulled back just enough to meet Ariel’s eyes, thumb brushing away a stray tear. “You never have to hide any part of yourself from me. Not the strong parts, not the hurting parts. I’m here for all of it. I want to be here.”
The nurse, patient and kind, waited until Ariel had calmed. “You did incredibly well, Ariel. That was a big first step. We’ll hold off on the spirometer for now. Just light breathing work until you feel ready.”
Ariel nodded against Holly’s shoulder.
The nurse smiled. “I’ll check back on you both this evening.”
And she slipped out, leaving them alone in the hush that followed trauma.
Holly stayed with Ariel, holding her close, letting the minutes stretch. Ariel’s breathing finally slowed, exhaustion overtaking her at last.
Holly helped her settle, adjusting wires, lifting the blanket. She pressed a gentle kiss to Ariel’s forehead. Ariel mumbled something soft and broken. Her eyes fluttered shut, at last at peace.
Holly didn’t move from the bedside. Her chair was drawn up tight, her posture vigilant and loving.
She didn’t trust the dark.

