It’s not the best method they think they can come up with for passing along messages––nothing and no one is safe in this tower, and they’re always been watched––but for how the static hasn’t lessened since being thrown back into Three’s suite, it’s the best they can do for now, the same way Blythe had gotten the wooden owl to them all those months ago, perhaps the way that coded message had ended up on their workbench in Three.
After their conversation with Blythe, they wish they had time to breathe before another painful, but desperately needed reunion. Their mind is full of distortion at the edges, memories cutting in and out, with no ability to write their thoughts down to keep them from flickering out of existence at the whim of the lingering electricity, and their body is exhausted. But they’re determined, a few more people they must see before they can consider going back to Three, taking a break, finding Robyn for a moment of quiet, and aid in changing their bandages.
So they head to the familiar spot, albeit a little more slowly than they wish, body working against them. And there she is, standing, safe in the very spot they had stood waiting for her to return. How twisted, how cruel of the Capitol to continue this over and over. How foolish, that they hadn’t learned their lesson, spitting too many of them back into the same place, with a new anger.
Silver approaches slowly as Swann turns around, greets them with words that are becoming all too familiar, and that newly familiar pang of emotion washes over them, grateful to see her safe, to know she’s still here, to see it with their own eyes. “They’re still not intelligent enough…to kill us,” Silver says, voice still not quite back, hoarse and shaky as their body, the joke not really a joke anymore, a true response to the very real worry that they had felt, too, when Swann had been taken. “Perhaps they’ll learn their lesson…soon enough…But for now…I’m glad to see you, Swann.”
She blinks: hard, fast, just enough to force back any tears that had threatened to force through at their initial remark. It begs the question she has been wondering for so long as well. Why haven’t they killed them yet? “Maybe you’re right. Lack of intelligence and too much arrogance.” Swann smiles then, not particularly bright nor warm, but a genuine smile. What matters is Silver is here, that they’ve been afforded a little more time, that they still have a chance at finishing what they, what Swann, what Blythe, and what Griffin started.
“It just makes them weak.” Her voice comes out defiant, but oddly soft, as if she’s offering them a promise. If she thought more, she might realize that she is: a promise to take advantage of that weakness and a promise that she’s still not backing down. But there’s a question in there too. It’s the same one Silver skipped around upon her return — Blythe as well — and Griffin only having just been forthright in his own.
They’re here physically of course. She doesn’t need to touch them to see just that, but she wants more than anything to know that the Silver standing before her hasn’t been lost to the wills of the Capitol. That they still have their spirit. That the Capitol wasn’t successful in convincing them that this all was a mistake, their fault for disobeying. Whether or not they still want to continue fighting and rebelling, it couldn’t matter less, and she’d understand it all the same, but Swann isn’t sure she’d know what to do if they blamed this all on themself, and if the Capitol had finally broken them down enough to regret ever having thought of the rebellion at all.
“I’m glad to see you too, Silver.” She goes quiet then, pushing down a swallow as she pushes down the shaking in her hands. “And, as one of my wisest friends once told me, what matters most is that you’re here. I’d like to keep you here, breathing for as long as nature will allow it. I know.. there are things that no one will be able to understand about what you went through. I won’t kid myself into thinking I could either, but... if there’s anything that I can do for you, please let me do it.”