Ignan didn’t want to look at her. He rarely apologised, not when he had felt so surely in the right. But at that moment, between the pain, Miranda’s anger and how uncomfortable the scene had been earlier that day, weeks after nearly dying, compounding months of secrecy and frustration. He obliged her request to sit still, though it surprised him. He looked round tentatively when her footsteps walked away, only to confirm she’d left the room. Sat on the edge of the bed, fingers digging into muscles and ligaments, searching for pressure points to relieve the pain, Ignan closed his eyes.
Her returning footsteps brought him back, but only to stare down at the floor, waiting for the next chapter of the disagreement, or worse still, the silent treatment to begin. Glassware found a home on his bedside table, and the mattress sunk down to the left of him. He held his breath, reciprocated by a hand on his leg.
“… If you won’t trust me enough to share things with me, don’t be surprised when no, it really doesn’t suit me.”
“I know.” Ignan uttered under his breath, gaze resting on her hand. “Mira, my lack of trust isn’t against you as a person. Of anyone I know, I trust you most. It’s habit, ingrained.” He softly placed his hand over hers, slipped his fingertips beneath. “And we’ve not a very good track record with sharing history.” The wizard sighed, letting go of his grip on his shoulder to look up at her properly.
It wasn’t entirely truth. His longest, oldest confidant was Georg, but he and Miranda had still not met. But he hadn’t fallen in love with, and married Georg (thank goodness). The only person he knew he could turn to for help (and also blunt advice) would always be Miranda. She knew foibles he didn’t realise he had.
“… I’ve not got a good record.” He corrected himself, recalling Miranda would happily recount her history, something Ignan could only do very selectively.