It’s three days until Pidge wakes from the coma, and Lance returns from the alien planet they spent their free time on with a bandaged thigh. Shiro is the first to see, when all of them are in the training room exhausting themselves with weights and sparring so they don’t have to think about the scar tissue healing on Pidge’s waist where there’d been a bullet wound days ago.
“Did you get hurt?” Shiro is immediately by Lance’s side, pulling up the leg of his shorts, his eyes shining dark with panic. “What happened? The planet is supposed to be friendly, they welcomed us into their town – “
“You fucking idiot,” Keith interrupts roughly. His worry is anger, always is.
But Lance slaps their hands away, even Shiro’s (it hurts a bit less than when it’s only Keith’s), and grins for some reason. “Relax. It’s only a tattoo.”
There’s no training after that, because Hunk is there too and demands to see and Shiro starts a scolding about responsibility and being able to go into battle, but then Lance carefully peels off the bandage – and Keith turns around. He leaves without looking back. Lance wouldn’t want him to see. It’s not his right. They’re a team, but he isn’t Hunk, not a friend, isn’t the faithful leader either.
Two weeks later, Keith realizes that it was just the beginning. Hunk is buried under an avalanche of rocks, still in his lion, and they only get him out because Lance systematically freezes the rocks and they splinter them apart bit by bit. It’s a quiet night after that. Keith should be glad, which he really is, but knowing that Lance sleeps in Hunk’s room that night has something dark and ugly growl in his chest. He shoves it back into his stomach. He has no right. Lance leaves the next day and comes back with a bandage on his arm.
After that, Shiro. Nobody knows what happened, but they find him after three days in the spaceship that had kidnapped him. Everyone on board is dead. Shiro doesn’t speak for a week. It takes a month for him to laugh again. Lance’s new bandage is on his lower back. Pidge says it’s the first black one.
And a month after that, he and Lance don’t talk anymore. Keith doesn’t apologize. It was the right thing to push Lance out of the way, take the knife to his chest instead. Barely past his heart, Allura had said. You almost died, I hate you, I hate you, Lance had screamed when Keith had woken up with blood in his mouth and hope in his chest. He doesn’t know how to fix this, can’t bring himself to regret. But they’re a team, fuck this, he goes to Lance’s room and knocks and sure thing, within a few sentences they’re yelling at each other.
“All of you,” Lance roars at him, grabbing his collar and slamming Keith against the wall so hard that his muscles protest, “you have to stop almost dying! I hate this, and you – you of all people, you’re strong, fuck, that’s why… why I put us together, you’re so – look. You need to understand what I feel – that I, you.”
Keith is still motionless against the wall when Lance steps back to pull his shirt off. He hoists up the leg of his pants, whirls around, “fucking look at me.”
Never has Keith obeyed faster.
The serval cat on Lance’s thigh is a vibrant green, the spots on its fur shaped like the silhouette of cells. On his arm sleeps a golden tiger, giant paws crossed peacefully, the claws out and sharp. Across Lance’s lower back is a shadow, a lion in ink-black with stars gleaming on almost real fur, eyes soft and head high with pride. And –
“God,” Keith breathes when Lance turns around, and he drags them into a kiss that’s raw and desperately final.
Over Lance’s heart, curved like the crescent moon, lies a red jaguar.
