"Okay," he says. "Let's go do this, I guess."
Vale's mouth curves. Just barely. Just enough.
They walk down the Cathedral steps together and into the morning.
Chapter 13
The walk back to August's apartment feels different.
Not the route. Vale knows the streets between the Central and the Old City well enough by now, has traced this path enough times in the past week that his feet find the turns without consulting his mind. The buildings are the same. The morning crowds are the same. The cold air carrying the smell of rain and street food and the distant mineral tang of the river is the same.
What's different is August.
He walks differently. It's subtle, nothing dramatic, nothing that anyone watching would notice, but Vale has spent days learning the language of this man's body, and the change is legible to him. August's shoulders are lower. His stride is fractionally longer. The tension that has lived in his spine since the moment Vale met him, the coiled, constant readiness ofsomeone who is always preparing to run, has loosened by a degree.
He's not relaxed. Vale doubts August has been truly relaxed since he was twelve years old, and one meeting with a Sanctus isn't going to undo fourteen years of survival instinct. But there's a difference between a man who is hiding and a man who has been told he doesn't have to, and that difference is visible in the way August moves through the Old City this morning. He's not making himself small. He's not scanning the rooftops for threats. He's just walking, and Vale is walking beside him, and the hand on the small of August's back hasn't moved since they left the Cathedral.
Vale keeps it there. August hasn't asked him to remove it, and until he does, Vale has no intention of letting go.
They reach August's building. Up the stairs, through the door, into the apartment that has become, over the course of five impossible days, something that feels dangerously close to home. August's research is still spread across the kitchen table. The teacups from this morning are still in the sink. The bed is still unmade, sheets tangled from the morning's activities, and Vale very deliberately does not look at it as they pass through the living room.
He has things to say that require his brain to be functioning.
August sheds his jacket and hat, tossing them over the back of a kitchen chair. Without the concealing layers, he's just himself. The charcoal henley pushed to his elbows, the faded grey tracing on his forearms, the warding tattoos standing out in clean dark lines. The bruises on his neck are vivid in the apartment's light, and Vale tracks them with an involuntary satisfaction that he should probably examine at some point but isn't going to right now.
August catches him looking. "Stop staring at those."
"No."
August rolls his eyes, but the corner of his mouth twitches. He moves to the kitchen, filling the kettle out of what Vale suspects is more habit than desire. Something to do with his hands while his mind processes the magnitude of what just happened. Vale watches him for a moment, then crosses to the couch and sits down.
The research on the coffee table stares up at him. The map with its colored marks, the binding circle drawn in red ink, the rift sites annotated in both their handwriting. One open rift remaining: the subway station, the second breach, still held in check by the blessing circle Vale had placed days ago. And somewhere in the city, at a Cabal site they haven't yet identified, the location where Maren Voss will attempt to tear open the final rift and complete his ritual.
One problem at a time.
"The subway rift," Vale says, as August brings two cups of tea to the coffee table and sets them down. "We should close it before Voss moves. Every active rift feeds the binding circle. If we can eliminate the last open node before the final rift opens, Voss has to carry the entire ritual on a single breach."
"Which might not be enough," August says, settling into the other end of the couch. "Even overcharged, a single rift feeding a binding circle with no supporting nodes is unstable. The energy dispersal would be..." He makes a gesture with his hands that suggests an explosion. "Catastrophic. For Voss. For the ritual. For the six blocks surrounding the Cathedral."
"So we close the subway rift, and then we stop the next one from opening. Cut him off on both fronts."
"That's the plan." August wraps his hands around his cup, a gesture Vale has seen enough times now to recognize as self-soothing. "When?"
"Tonight. Knox and Cassidy can meet us there." Vale pauses, studying August across the length of the couch. He looks betterthan he has at any point since Vale met him. Color in his face, clarity in his eyes, the corruption reduced to its faintest levels. But Vale has learned the hard way that how August looks and how August is are often two different things, and the subway rift is going to be stronger than the others. Knox's warning had been clear: closing rifts intensifies those that remain. The energy has to go somewhere, and it's been going into the last open breach for days.
"But not yet," Vale says. "You need to rest first."
August gives him a look. "I feel fine."
"You feel better than you're used to. That's not the same as fine." Vale sets down his tea. "Each rift has been more powerful than the last. The subway was already the second-strongest site when we left it, and now it's been absorbing the redistributed energy from three closed rifts. What you're walking into tonight is going to make the railway station look manageable."
"I know that."
"Then you know that walking in exhausted, running on adrenaline and whatever residual energy you have from this morning, is a good way to end up dead on the platform."
August opens his mouth to argue. Vale watches him cycle through several responses. Defiance, dismissal, the reflexive insistence that he's fine and doesn't need anyone to tell him to take care of himself. The same pattern Vale has watched play out a dozen times over the past five days, the stubbornness so deeply embedded in August's survival programming that he fights rest the way other people fight threats.
But something has shifted. The walls that used to snap into place when Vale pushed back on his self-destruction are slower to rise now. They still go up, because August is August and fourteen years of martyrdom don't evaporate overnight, but they go up with less conviction. He's building them out of habit rather than belief.