8th of July, 2026 - Sean Williams
BEFORE THE STORM
King slowly opened his eyes.
Rain fell over the Tower. A grey mist that beaded on his pauldrons and dripped off the lip of his helmet. From the rampart he could see the City laid out below in folds of slate and amber light, the Traveler hanging over it - patient, scarred and silent.
"You're doing the thing again," Solace said, drifting up beside him. Despite her size, her voice always carried.
"What thing?"
"The thing where you stand very still and pretend you're looking at the City and you're actually looking at the Reef."
King didn't deny it. Solace had been with him long enough to read the set of his shoulders. "I keep doing the math," he said. "How many of the docks at the Vestian Web are still lit. Whether anyone's flying the lattice patrol anymore, or if it's just drifting now. Whether Petra's slept since the Awoken Watch thinned out."
"You could ask her."
"I could."
Solace settled lower, closer to his shoulder, the way she did when she wanted him to know she wasn't going anywhere. "I remember when you didn't talk about the Reef at all. Not for years. You just put your head down and fought whatever was in front of you. First the House of Wolves, then the Dreadnaught. It was like if you hit hard enough you wouldn't have to think about home."
"It worked for a while."
"It worked until Oryx took Saturn, and you spent three days asking me whether the Queen's…"
King's grip tightened around the rail, just slightly. Solace had learned this tell across years of reviving this particularly stubborn Titan. "She didn’t deserve that. It’s just something I think about."
"I know." she said with a pause. "For what it's worth, for everything Skolas threw at us, for the Taken, for SIVA eating its way through the Iron Lords, you came out the other side of all of it still able to stand on a wall in the rain and care about whether some lights are on across the system. Most Guardians who've seen what we've seen go numb to one side or the other."
"And which side did I go numb to?"
"Neither, yet. Ask me again in a-"
"King."
The voice cut clean through the rain, low and even. Zavala stood a few paces off at the rampart's stair, rainwater sheeting off the plate of his shoulders, hands clasped loosely behind his back in the posture King had come to recognize as ‘I have five minutes and I intend to use four of them listening’.
"Commander." King straightened, not quite to attention, but close.
Solace dimmed politely and drifted back, murmuring only, "I'll let you two talk," before slipping off toward the Hangar without further comment. She'd learned, over the years, exactly how much room these two needed.
Zavala watched her go, then came to stand at the rail beside King, looking out at the same grey City King had been looking at for the better part of an hour. For a moment neither of them said anything.
"I’ve stood at rails like this in the Reef," Zavala said finally. "The view was worse, if I'm honest. Derelict hulks instead of a city, the black instead of cloud. But the same feeling. The sense that everything you're responsible for is on the other side of a wall you built yourself."
"You don't talk about the Reef much."
"Neither do you, until tonight." The words fell with a faint, dry edge. "Solace isn't wrong, you know. About not going numb. I’ve seen many Awoken choose the City over the Reef, in one way or another. Burying who they were and where they came from so the City wouldn't have to make room for it. You never did that. I've always respected it, even when it put us at odds."
"And when have we been at odds, Commander?"
"Every time you've pushed me to spend City resources on Reef troubles the Consensus would rather forget exist. Every time I've said no." Zavala's gaze didn't leave the City below. "I stand by every refusal. I'd make them again. But I want you to hear me say, once, plainly, that I don't make them lightly. The Reef is not nothing to me, King. It's only ever been a question of what this City can afford to carry, and what it can't."
It was, King thought, the closest thing to an apology he would ever get from this man, and somehow that made it land harder than an apology would have.
Before he could answer, a soft chime sounded at Zavala's collar. King recognised Ikora's channel, brief and clipped. Words too low for King to catch over the rain. Whatever it was, King watched it land on Zavala's face like a stone dropped into still water. A faint crease formed between his brows.
"Trouble?" King asked.
"Ikora wouldn't call it that yet." Zavala was already turning, his attention already gone. "I have to go. We'll finish this."
"We never finish these," King said, but said it to Zavala's back, and Zavala didn't argue, because they both knew it was true.
The rain kept falling. King stood alone at the rail a long moment and looked out at the City. Every light, every wall, every ship moving low and slow beneath the cloud. He did not, for once, let his eyes drift toward the dark beyond it where the Reef hung quiet and unlit.
Not yet, anyway.