Obviously not. But he was freaking out, and his nose was bleeding, and she didn't know what else might have gone wrong with his chronokinesis. One of them had to be the grounded one, the eye of the storm and whatever, though she felt more like the last stake holding down a tent in a hurricane. "I'm fine," she said, because what else was there to say? That she'd wanted to stab people before but had too much impulse control to follow through, and now that she'd done it, she found that she didn't really like it but that she'd do it again in a heartbeat? Would she tell him that every time she turned her back to an open space she felt like Melat was creeping up on them, even though Melat was in several pieces on the floor and now being bled out around their house? Of course she wouldn't, because that would only make things worse.
She knew what Feo thought of her, both in general and with the Kyros situation. High-maintenance and unreasonable, unforgiving and contrite. He'd accused her of being those things and more, but she wouldn't let him accuse her of being weak. She wasn't going to be the vulnerable one in their equation, and she certainly wasn't going to make him feel like he had to shoulder the burden of her emotions. Though she'd never asked him to in the first place, he'd prod his way into the center of her drama and then complain to Sparrow about how much drama there was, leaving Parisa looking and feeling like a hysterical fool. He could sit on his stoop and wallow in his despair. She would resolve this latest trauma on her own.