Ben was stumbling through his words, and Dionisia was trying her best to listen, trying to understand the meaning through the breaks in his sentences and the quiet profanity that caused her to glance in Elliott's direction each time. He was looking increasingly confused by the entire situation, and Dionisia subtly reached down with one arm to pull him into her lap. She scooted closer to Ben instinctively, and then reached out a hand to gently wrap her thumb and pinky around his wrist, her other fingers resting atop his arm. It was a way of steadying herself, but more than that was the only gesture of reassurance she could manage, her mouth having gone dry. She held it there and just stared at him for a moment, and Elliott was staring in Ben's direction too though she couldn't see his face.
Finally she found her voice and found her words. She squeezed his wrist and finally let go, swallowing once more before speaking. "You don't have to—explain yourself. If you want this, I'm here. He's here." She said it because it was the right thing to say, not because she didn't wish he would explain himself. There was a piece of the puzzle she knew she was missing, and listening to Ben she didn't think any details she was missing from before her accident would have helped solve it. However, pressuring him to tell her anything was wrong; she wasn't a friend of a confidante, but Elliott's mom. He didn't owe her any explanation. She smoothed Elliott's hair back over his forehead, and he leaned back against her chest, his worried expression gone.
Finally she found her voice and found her words. She squeezed his wrist and finally let go, swallowing once more before speaking. "You don't have to—explain yourself. If you want this, I'm here. He's here." She said it because it was the right thing to say, not because she didn't wish he would explain himself. There was a piece of the puzzle she knew she was missing, and listening to Ben she didn't think any details she was missing from before her accident would have helped solve it. However, pressuring him to tell her anything was wrong; she wasn't a friend of a confidante, but Elliott's mom. He didn't owe her any explanation. She smoothed Elliott's hair back over his forehead, and he leaned back against her chest, his worried expression gone.