"Your back to mine, wasn't it?" Her eyes creased with her smile as she approached.
She felt bad. No matter how much they had tried to remove him from the center of danger, the fact of the matter was that the crowd had loved him - and the enemies, as well. In all her time, Lyn didn't think she had seen someone so frail withstand so many vicious attacks back to back - not least of which, because she had put herself in the line of danger to prevent it, when able.
But she couldn't do that here, her attention divided, forced to focus on the stiffness of her movements to allow the more powerful among their party to drive them forward to their victory.
She could only thank Father Sky for the solidity of their victory, and Mother Earth that none had gone to lie within her, at the end of it.
"Oh, you still have a little - here - " She reached forward, gently, to pat out the remaining creep of flame along his robes, sighing as they sparked in the dark air as they were corralled along and forward into the dark unknown.
"You need to see a healer - come, if you need to lean on me, I'll gladly take you wherever you need to go. I don't quite understand what's happening here, but I do know that whatever may come, I want you to rely on me."
※— HER SMILE WAS THE MOST DANGEROUS PART ABOUT HER. He’d seen enough of them to know. Smiles were shields, not banners, and hers had been honed into a weapon so cleanly that even the enemy might think themselves blessed to be cut by it. Changed by it. Men with weaker constitutions would bleed until their colors changed, thinking themselves more because they were made less in her light.
"Yes," he said easily, his own mouth curving just enough to mirror her. "Your back to mine. I remember."
The words were warm enough to pass for sentimentality, but something behind them lingered—an unspoken reminder that he hadn’t asked for her protection, and he’d survived long before she’d decided to stand between him and the flames.
His gaze followed her hand as she brushed away the embers, eyes briefly tracing the heat’s last glow against her fingers. He didn’t flinch at the contact. In fact, he might as well have allowed her to linger.
"You’re very thorough," Julius murmured, voice light. "But you waste that kind of care on me."
When she offered for him to lean on her, he tilted his head just slightly, the gesture caught between amusement and curiosity. So touch-driven, these ones. He wasn't. He never really was. The women in his past company were the nurturing kind, and the troves of admirers served him on their knees. Though he had an aversion to it, touch held as much power, if not more, than a mere gaze. So he knew how to use it to his advantage.
The faintest pause, like a string pulled taut.
"But if you insist—" the corner of his mouth curled a fraction more, "—I’ll let you. I am not used to people like you."
He crested an arm slowly over her shoulder, and huffed under his breath. But between him, the god he housed, and the girl, it certainly sounded like a chuckle.