a prince and his knight
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a prince and his knight
Heith Week - “Touch Aversion“
Day 3: Fighting/Touch
Because touch-averse Keith is still one of my favorite headcanons and I don’t explore it often enough.
[Read on AO3]
Keith didn’t like to be touched.
He’d never been able to describe it: the way a stranger brushing up against him in a crowd left a residue on his skin he couldn’t wash away. The way his foster parents’ hugs had smothered him, left him feeling trapped. The way a friendly jab or a slap on the arm or a hand ruffling his hair hit him like an electric shock, hot and sharp and just this side of painful.
He’d never figured out how to explain that to people, as he’d never been able to explain to his own satisfaction why some touches were different. Saying it, saying it was different with certain people, in certain contexts, on certain days, made it all feel like a lie he’d built up to shut people out. But it was different. It didn’t bother him when Shiro put a hand on his shoulder. It didn’t hurt. Didn’t chafe. Shiro was safe, and his touch was grounding, and Keith didn’t know why, but that changed things.
He thought, maybe, things had changed where the other paladins were concerned, too.
so more heith week both boyfriends admiring the others SICK GAINZ YO
Do you know when Heith week will start this year?
No idea! No one told me about last year’s, I just happened to stumble across the dates like a week before it started lol. Anyone know? 💜
Heith Week: “Bed Rest”
Day 1: Laughing/Crying
Read them all on my blog in the Heith Week tag. You can also read these on AO3.
There was a steady thump, thump, thump audible through the wall of Keith’s room as Hunk made his way back from the training deck. He grimaced, steps slowing, and hesitantly lifted a hand to knock on the door.
At once, the thumping stopped.
“Keith?” Hunk asked, drawing the word out. “You in there?”
There was a moment of silence, a moment Lance or Pidge would have used to spit out a sarcastic comment about how, no, their room was haunted.
Keith just sighed, the sound very nearly melodramatic by his standards. “Yeah,” he finally said. “Come on in.”
Hunk opened the door and leaned his head into the room. Even after months on the castle-ship, Keith’s room hardly seemed lived in. Where Hunk’s room was an explosion of recipes and schematics and engineering projects abandoned at the first sound of an alarm—where Lance’s was equally full of mementos from their many excursions, Pidge’s with robots and wires and flash drives, Shiro’s with Altean histories and memoirs and strategy books—Keith’s was empty. A tablet on the desk, his jacket on the hook by the wall. That was it.
Hunk thought of the shack in the desert where they’d all spent that first, surreal night after rescuing Shiro. That space had felt like Keith’s, with its dirty clothes strewn about, its drawings and maps on the walls, its books and military rations and shortwave radio.
“You don’t spend much time in here, do you?”
The words were out of Hunk’s mouth before he could consider whether it was a smart thing to say to someone who was, currently, bedridden.
Keith groaned softly, and let his head fall back against the wall. He was sitting on the bed, legs crossed, blade in his lap. “We’re fighting a war, Hunk,” he said. “Every minute I spend in bed is a minute that could be better spent training, or fighting, or—or—I don’t know, figuring out how the hell we’re supposed to form Voltron without Shiro.”
There was a sharp edge to Keith’s words, dulled only a little by the weeks that had passed since they’d opened up the Black Lion’s cockpit to find the black bayard and an empty chair. Keith cursed softly, shoved his knife back into its sheath, and dropped his forehead onto his knees.
Hunk sighed, drumming his fingers on the doorframe for a moment before crossing to sit on the edge of Keith’s bed. “I take it the R&R’s not going so well.”
Keith gave him an incredulous look. “R&R?” he asked sourly. “More like cruel and unusual punishment. Did you know these rooms have bed alarms? I can’t go to the bathroom without Coran calling me up on the intercom and asking me if everything’s alright.”
“You’re joking?” Hunk’s eyebrows lifted, and he reminded himself that laughing at Keith’s frustration wouldn’t get him anywhere he wanted to go. “How many times did he catch you sneaking off to the training deck before he resorted to that?”
Keith flushed, glaring hard at the knife in his lap. “Five,” he said, then lifted his chin and fixed Hunk with a glare that stopped Hunk’s laughter in its tracks. “I can’t afford to fall behind.”
“Fall behind? Dude, come on.”
“I just...” Keith ran his thumb along the flat of his blade, tracing the Marmorite symbol near the hilt. He didn’t look at Hunk. “I don’t get why I have to be on bed rest.”
Hunk snorted. “You broke your femur.”
Keith’s hands slowed, one reaching toward his thigh, running over the wrinkles in his pant leg. Hunk wondered whether he remembered yesterday as well as Hunk did. The way his armor had shattered in the jaws of the Galra beast, the way it had tossed its head, flinging him thirty feet like he weighed nothing at all. The odd angle of his leg, the blood seeping through the fissures. The way he’d screamed when Hunk and Coran set the bone before sticking him in the cryopod.
“I thought the pods were supposed to be able to fix anything,” Keith grumbled.
There were a lot of ways Hunk could have responded to that, but he knew that ‘it could be worse’ wasn’t actually going to make Keith feel better. So he changed tactics.
“Lance tried to melee it today.”
Slowly, Keith turned his head. “Yeah? How’d that go?”
“Well, he did manage to take out the gladiator,” Hunk said fairly. “But he kinda did it by accident.”
“How do you accidentally take out a killer robot?”
Hunk grinned. “Mistimed his dodge, got tossed like an old hacky-sack, but flailed just right as he fell to take the thing’s head off. He’s going to try to tell you he planned it.” He paused, meeting Keith’s eye. “He did not.”
Keith laughed, a small, surprised sound that made Hunk’s heart flutter. Laughter from Keith was a rare, precious thing, as fleeting as it was breathtaking, like a double rainbow, or a unicorn, or—heck—the Loch Ness Monster. Hunk had been chasing this particular cryptid for the better part of six months, and he’d only managed to make Keith laugh—really laugh, uninhibited, as he had that night on Arus when he was just tipsy enough to let down his guard—twice.
Today seemed like a good day to up that count.
“To be fair, we were all kind of a mess.” Hunk situated himself against the wall beside Keith, not quite close enough to touch, and tucked his hands behind his head. “In case you were wondering, I do not do well against the gladiator without someone there to keep him off me. Lance and Pidge are great and all, but they are not what I’d call a solid defensive line.”
“I’m sure it wasn’t that bad,” Keith said.
Hunk laughed once, rubbing his shoulder. “Uh, yeah, no. Did you know if you shoot the power matrix in just the right spot, you can shut off all the lights on the training deck? Cause, uh, you can. And the gladiator does not care if you can’t see it.”
Keith winced, curling in on himself. “Sorry,” he said. “I should’ve been there.”
No, wait, Hunk wanted to say. You're not supposed to feel bad. That’s not how this is supposed to go. He puffed himself up, elbowing Keith in the side. “Don’t worry about it. I’m pretty sure I managed to convince Coran that screaming like a little girl is a traditional Earth war cry.”
“You didn’t.”
“Sure I did. Told him Girl Scouts are fearsome warriors and I got some to train me in self defense when I was a kid. He totally bought it, too. Shrieked like a banshee when he sparred with Pidge after that. She was so busy laughing he disarmed her in record time. I think Lance is planning on teaching him the Tarzan yell next.” Hunk demonstrated for him, ululating to the very best of his ability.
Keith did laugh then, full-bodied laughs that erased the lines frustration had build up around his eyes. Keith was like a different person when he laughed, his face brighter, the hand that had been massaging his injured leg now clutching at Hunk’s sleeve. The laughter burrowed into Hunk’s chest and resonated there, a bonfire that burned away the aches of training. It was hard to think of fatigue in the face of Keith’s infectious smile, a smile that said yesterday’s disastrous battle didn’t matter, said the mantle of leadership Keith was still learning to bear wasn’t quite so heavy now as it sometimes seemed to be.
Keith’s laughter tapered off, and he turned to Hunk with a brilliant smile, the kind that made Hunk forget how to string words together. “Thanks for coming to check on me,” Keith said. “I’m sure you had better ways to spend your night.”
“Better than this?” Hunk asked, returning Keith’s smile. “I don’t think so.”
The way Keith’s eyes brightened, Hunk decided, was a better cure for sore muscles and fresh bruises than an entire week in a cryopod.
Heith Week - “Date Night”
Day 4: Dreams/Reality
[Read on AO3]
Hunk wanted their first date to be perfect.
Okay, sure, by certain definitions they’d already been on plenty of dates—easy missions where they ended up just wandering around some ruins competing to make the best puns, movie nights in Hunk’s room buried under a mountain of blanket eating astronaut food (Keith’s term for Hunk’s creative food goo transformations), several dozen sunsets spent hand in hand on new and beautiful planets.
But none of those had been official. None of those had been dates. They’d been brief moments stolen from the jaws of a war that seemed bent on tearing them both apart. However much Hunk treasured those stolen moments, he held no delusions as to what they really were: desperate attempts to stop Keith from overworking himself in the search for Shiro and the fight against Lotor and the paladins’ constant efforts to step up and fill the gaping hole in their team. Sometimes Keith worked himself to the point of collapse and then came to Hunk for comfort; more often Hunk tracked Keith down on the training deck and imposed a fleeting moment of calm before the storm raged back in.
Heith Week - “Good Enough”
Day 2: Gain/Loss
[Read on AO3]
Shiro’s absence always hit Keith when he least expected it. Sitting down to dinner, his eyes falling on the empty chair beside him. Mid-battle when the Black Lion rumbled inside his skull, as familiar as she was foreign. A piece of Shiro, and the hole where Shiro should have been.
Heith Week - “Precipice”
Day 5: family/friends
[Read on AO3]
“I barely knew my parents,” Keith admitted, staring past his feet at the dizzying drop. Even knowing it was only a projection created by the castle, and that a smooth, blank gray floor waited just a few inches past the soles of his shoes, he still felt a faint touch of vertigo—not enough to make him uncomfortable, but enough. It was the little pulse of adrenaline that had drawn him to flying, the whispering voice that said mankind isn’t meant to be all the way up here.
Beside him, Hunk was pointedly not looking down at the simulated chasm. They’d discovered this room a few months ago, and they occasionally came here when the war had kept them in deep space for too long and Keith started to itch for more open vistas. Hunk usually let Keith choose the scenery, though the dazzling heights and raging storms and festering lava fields Keith preferred often left Hunk a little pale.
This is your thing, Hunk had once said. I want to share it with you, but not if it means you feel like you have to hold back on my account.
So Keith chose the places his soul ached for, and Hunk found ways to remind himself their lives were not actually in danger. He sat now with his feet planted firmly on the edge of the viewing platform, though that put him about a foot behind Keith, and watched the curious lavender clouds, wispy and ever-changing, whip by overhead. “But you saw your dad in the Blade’s illusion thingamajig, right?”
Keith sighed, leaning a little more forward, so that it felt like an errant breeze might send him toppling a mile or more to the silvery thread of the river far below. “Yeah. I remember him a little. He used to take me camping.”