Not because anyone was playing to the cameras.
Because the unvarnished truth of it was already more than enough.
A devastated, exhausted father.
His resilient children.
A brutally difficult year.
A sprawling, chaotic studio that had once meant nothing more than routine and paychecks was now actively becoming the setting for something much more fragile, much more powerful, and beautifully human.
Brennan looked around at the circle of people welcoming him, his chest heaving slightly.
He looked down briefly at the scuffed floorboards, as if mentally steadying himself against the spin of the earth.
When he looked back up, the professional composure was still there, painted on his features, but so was absolutely everything churning underneath it.
There was profound, overwhelming gratitude.
There was lingering, residual pain.
There was the dizzying relief of the storm finally breaking.
There was the distinct, heavy ache of coming back to a familiar place fundamentally changed.
And there was the quiet, tear-filled disbelief that he had actually made it to this moment with his family intact.
He was acutely aware that a return to normal life can feel incredibly joyful and utterly heartbreaking at the exact same time.
He reached out, pulling his children just a fraction closer to his legs, preparing to finally speak, to thank them, to transition the moment back into a workday so he wouldn’t completely fall apart.
And just when it seemed the room had already given him the most emotionally charged, cathartic welcome possible, one specific coworker—a friend he had known for years, who had sat with him in the darkest of those waiting rooms stepped through the crowd.
They stepped closer, reaching out to grip Brennan’s forearm, and said something so intensely personal, so entirely unexpected, that Brennan’s entire expression shifted in a heartbeat.
Because the real, devastating weight of his return had not even fully hit him yet.