As the light left Ghislain’s face, panic replaced the confusion on Virginia’s. There were walls between them now, built by something she didn’t know and certainly hadn’t intended to trigger. She only meant to express her genuine hope that she had done something good while she was alive, especially if that goodness had been directed towards the man in front of her now. Clearly, she had done enough to be memorable, but without any knowledge of those things, she was forced to rely on his words alone.
She listened to his tone with trepidation, not missing the way his body moved away from her as if she was suddenly the enemy. For a moment, she debated what it was that she needed before realizing she needed some relief to the guilty ache in her heart that his reaction had caused.
“I-I’m sorry. Whatever I said wrong, I’m sorry. If I insulted you or brought up bad memories o-or…or anything at all, I’m sorry.” She shifted in the water, sitting up with the support of the edge of the tub and an agonized whimper. “I don’t always know what I’m saying, I think, and you’re unlike anyone I’ve ever met before, so I don’t know…how to talk to you without upsetting you. Please don’t be upset. Whatever I’ve done, I’m sorry.”
Ghislain swallows and rolls his neck as she talks. His head cranes back, staring at the ceiling while he breathes heavily though his nose. That feeling in his chest, the one he can’t name or recognize, it happens every time she looks like she’s going to cry. Every time she makes a noise of pain. Every time she’s upset. Ghislain slumps back to the floor, turning so his back is against the smooth stone of the area the tub is built in to.
“Bad memories. You brought up bad memories,” Gizmo muttered, back to her now. The angel needed to know what she did to put her poor panicked mind to some sort of rest. She’s just to innocent. It’s weird and he doesn’t know how to handle her either, so she can’t be blamed there. “It was a long time ago. I try to forget every day.” The way his head hangs, the slight slump to his shoulder, his frigid tone; they all add up to betray one thing: He’s bad at forgetting. Ghislain turns his head, chin bumping his shoulder as he addresses her out of his peripheral. “Just sit back before you hurt yourself more, alright?”














