Regina waited patiently with her slop for Anke to arrive, more than content to wait for her company before engaging in breakfast. It was rude to eat without everyone being there, after all. Her mother had taught her that. Wait, what? Regina clamped onto the errant thought and refused to simply let it pass. Her mother? Regina strained, trying to come up with more. She had taught her politeness at the dinner table? Regina squeezed her eyes shut, trying to come up with more, but eventually sighed and shook her head. It was no use. Forcing the memories was only going to make it all the harder to actually have them come to her. She had come up with a tiny bit. That in and of itself was good. But for now, Anke was in front of her, and that was what was important.
Regina blinked at Anke's insistence that the past was the past. Maybe she couldn't change anything, but to simply forget and move on felt irrational at best. She'd clung to every failure in years past, using them as fuel to her fire for improvement. Not that her failures were many-in fact, prior to this year, she could count on less than one hand the number of critical mistakes she'd made. So much had changed with Anke's arrival. She wondered if somehow, that had been planned. At the very least, Anke seemed to acknowledge her need to do better, so Regina kept her gaze firmly fixed on Anke as she spoke. She had to...trust her. Regina cocked her head. Bad news...about Osnen? Regina wondered if she meant with regards to her loyalty. Regina had to trust her, believe her. She closed her eyes, taking a bite of slop as she tried to consider the meaning behind it. Trust that Osnen...wasn't right for her?
Regina opened her eyes again. It didn't feel right. Of course it didn't feel right. How could it? To show disloyalty to the people who saved her life was akin to sacrilege. But if it was for Anke, to show her they could be strong together... "...okay." Regina ceded with a quiet expression. "I'll try my best." Regina nodded once, knowing full well such a commitment would be a difficult endeavor. Luckily, Anke gave her a much easier task, one that had her cheeks colored pink at the implication. "Okay." This 'okay' was much less heavy, one that sounded more hopeful and light. Regina went at her slop again quietly, thinking about what the day ought to entail. Shooting...still didn't feel right. She needed to wash the bad taste of the missed shots out of her head, and the range was only going to compound that issue. She could force the training tomorrow, but today she'd get nothing done, of that she was certain.
"For today, I was thinking we could simply do some cardio. A 5k wouldn't be a bad use of time." Regina figured a run with Anke would be pleasurable enough for both of them, as well as a good use of time to train her stamina. It had been a while since she did some running outside of the gym, and the weather looked pleasant, the dust levels from the Badlands seemingly kept to a minimum for the day. "After that, an afternoon of relaxing while we get the paperwork for your transfer." That likely meant a session of cleaning her guns, which by now was therapeutic to Regina. A nice bit of a change of pace. To her, a run and maintenance was the example of a do-nothing day, a day where Regina was 'lazy'. "Unless you had any ideas?" Regina didn't want to command the conversation nor their plans, knowing full well Anke often had ideas that she couldn't possibly come up with.
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