Page 29 of Stars Don't Forget


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This is me wanting.

And I don’t know what to do with that.

My breath shakes when I stop typing.

I set the pad down gently, like it’s something fragile that might break—or worse, something dangerous that might not.

There’s no one here but me.

But I still feel watched.

Not in a sinister way.

Just... aware.

Like I’ve cracked open something and the station itself is holding its breath to see what spills out.

Later, I feel him approach before I actually see him. He comes in quietly. Healwaysdoes.

No footsteps. No announcement. Just presence.

He doesn’t ask about the journal in my lap, and I don’t offer a reason. The glow of the pad dims when he enters, and I swipe the log away before the words can stare back at me. The screen goes blank. My thoughts do not.

I don’t say hi.

He doesn’t either.

This is our rhythm now—tightrope silence, interrupted only when one of us slips.

The next test is stupid.

Petty, even.

But I do it anyway.

I tuck a data packet—unauthorized, encrypted, and very obviously tagged with the wrong clearance—half-exposed beneath the edge of my ration tray. He’ll see it. Hehasto. I want to know what happens next.

His gaze skims it once.

Then moves on.

No questions.

No confrontation.

No sudden reach for his wrist comm.

I blink.

What?

Later, I hover near the system node on the wall—restricted access, blinking red, very off-limits. I don’t even touch it. I just stare like I might.

He’s three feet behind me.

I don’t hear him move. I only feel the air shift.

“You don’t have access,” he says, low.