Rowan kept walking. Three more steps, four, five - their body on autopilot, feet carrying them away from the house, away from family breakfast tables and expectations and the weight of having promised to stay.
Keep moving. Don't stop. Get to the street corner and figure out where the nearest bus stop is. Airport after that. Mongolia was nice. Could go back to Mongolia.
Then Dmitri's voice cut through the noise in their head.
Rowan wait.
They stopped. Stood there on the sidewalk with their back to him, hands still gripping their camera bag strap, shoulders up around their ears like they could physically protect themselves from whatever was coming next.
Their heart was hammering again. Different from the panic attack, worse somehow. Because they knew what was coming. The conversation where Dmitri realized they were too much work, too broken, not worth the effort.
The apology in his voice made their chest hurt worse than the panic attack had.
They turned around slowly.
Dmitri was standing there with his hands in his pockets, looking at the sidewalk, giving them an out. Apologizing for pushing them. Offering to walk them to a hotel and leave them alone.
Like this was his fault. Like he'd done something wrong by having a kind family who made breakfast and welcomed strangers.
No. No, he couldn't think this was his fault. That wasn't fair. None of this was fair to him.
"Stop."
The word came out sharper than they intended. They took a breath, tried again.
"Don't apologize. You didn't do anything wrong. Your family was lovely and breakfast was good and you didn't push me into anything."
Their fingers were still worrying at the camera strap. They forced themselves to stop, to drop their hands to their sides even though they immediately wanted to find something else to fidget with.
Say it. Just say it. He deserves to know this isn't his fault.
"I had a panic attack in your bathroom." The admission came out flat, matter-of-fact.
"Not because of you. Not because of your parents. Because I'm fucked up and I don't know how to do this."
They gestured vaguely between themselves and Dmitri, encompassing whatever this was. This thing they'd started in Berlin and picked back up last night.
This thing that terrified them. This thing they wanted desperately to not ruin.
"I texted my therapist from Berlin. Dr. Vogler. Haven't talked to her in four months because I ghosted her the same way I ghosted you and Elena and everyone else I've ever gotten close to."
Their voice was getting tighter. They were standing maybe ten feet away from Dmitri and every part of them wanted to close that distance, wanted his hand in theirs again, wanted that grounding contact. But their body wouldn't cooperate, wouldn't let them move closer.
Like there was an invisible fence between them. Like getting too close would trigger some alarm system in their brain that would send them running for real this time.
"She responded thinking I was still in Berlin. Thinking this was about Elena. Said she was proud of me for meeting parents, for trying." A bitter laugh.
"Except she doesn't know I left Berlin. Doesn't know I've been running for four months. Doesn't know this is about someone completely different and I'm still doing the exact same shit I was doing before."
God, saying it out loud made it worse. Made the pattern more obvious. Made it clear that nothing had changed, that four years of therapy hadn't fixed whatever was broken in them that made staying feel impossible.
They ran a hand through their damp hair, frustrated.
"I sat at your family's table and told them I was staying. Told them I cared. Let myself be vulnerable and honest and the second I was alone my brain started screaming that this was too much and I needed to leave."
Their hands found each other, fingers twisting together nervously.
"But I don't want to leave. That's the fucked up part. I want to stay. I want to hold your hand and go for a walk and see Portland and come back for dinner like a normal person who can handle basic human connection."
They finally met his eyes.
Looking at him hurt. Seeing the concern there, the tiredness, the careful way he was holding himself. Like he was the one who needed to be careful. Like he was the problem.
"I'm not good at this, Dmitri. The staying thing. The being close to people thing. Four years of therapy in Berlin and I still freak out when things start feeling real. But you didn't do anything wrong. Your family didn't do anything wrong. This is just me being broken in ways I don't know how to fix."
The space between them felt too big. Rowan took one step forward. Then stopped, like they'd hit an invisible wall.
Their body was screaming at them. Half of it saying get closer, you need him, you want this. The other half saying run, flee, this is dangerous, caring hurts, everyone leaves eventually so leave first.
"I don't feel trapped by you. I feel trapped by my own shit. By four years of patterns I can't seem to break even when I want to."
They tried for another step. Managed it this time. Closer but still not close enough.
Their hands were shaking. They shoved them in their pockets so Dmitri wouldn't see.
"I want to do the walk. Please. I need to move, I need air, and I need to not run away from you right now because that's what I always do and I'm trying really hard not to do that this time."
Their voice cracked slightly on the last words.
Please don't give up on me. Please don't decide I'm too much work. Please just let me be broken and stay anyway.
"So can we just. Walk? And I'll try not to be so fucked up about basic human kindness? And maybe in like an hour I'll be able to actually touch you again without feeling like I'm going to crawl out of my skin?"
They were close enough now to see the details of his face. The tiredness, the concern, the way he was holding himself carefully like he thought one wrong move would send Rowan sprinting.
He wasn't wrong.
God, they'd fucked this up so fast. Less than twenty-four hours and they were already proving they were exactly as broken as they'd warned him they were.
"I'm sorry I freaked out. I'm sorry I'm like this. I'm sorry you have to deal with my shit on top of everything else you're going through."
Their hands twisted together in their pockets.
He almost died three days ago and here Rowan was having a breakdown about breakfast. About normal, kind, decent people being nice to them. What the fuck was wrong with them?
"But I'm here. I'm still here. I'm not running. That's progress, right? Even if I'm having a breakdown on your parents' sidewalk, at least I'm having it here instead of at the airport buying a ticket to anywhere else."
A weak attempt at humor that fell flat.
They were trying. They were trying so hard. It just didn't look like much from the outside because trying for them meant standing on a sidewalk having a breakdown instead of already being gone.
"Can we walk? Please?"
The plea came out quieter than they intended. More desperate.
Because if Dmitri said no, if he decided this was too much, if he took the out Rowan had accidentally given him by being a disaster - they didn't know what they'd do. Probably actually run this time. Probably prove every fear they had right.
But maybe, maybe if they could just walk, just move, just exist next to him for a little while without having to perform okay or normal or fine - maybe they could figure out how to be the person who stayed instead of the person who left.