“Oh!” Lochlann said. “Congratulations. I hope the two of them are very happy.”
He liked her wistful smile.
Lochlann had a visual of himself kissing her when she smiled like that but he bit the inside of his cheek until he tasted blood and reminded himself that he probably would be tasting blood if he thought about kissing her again, and he most definitely did not want that.
Well, he did.
But he didn’t let himself.
“I have an older brother and a younger sister,” Lochlann said. “They’re both back in the states with my parents. I miss Lilly a lot. She came to see my graduate and I think she wanted to come to the academy, but I think she’ll probably stay in the states. It’s been a while since I’ve seen them. Do you go back home at all?”
The last time Lochlann went home had been a disaster. His family wasn’t thrilled to see him back, which was to be expected after all. He wasn’t exactly marked cleared and they were really hoping he’d have an education that would actually be useful to them. But the awkwardness of his family was fine. It was the unexpected arrival of a girl pretending to be his girlfriend that made the last visit so uncomfortable.
When the topic shifted back to the water and fears, Lochlann shifted his weight to his right leg. He considered her fear of heights and strangers in the dark and said, “Well, I don’t know if you’ll like the roof then. But if it makes you feel any better I would not be upset if you wanted to tell someone where we’re going. Also, I promise not to make you look over the edge.”
Lochlann wondered if he was supposed to admit one of his fears in return. After a moment’s hesitation he said, “I hate needles. I mean, I hate other people with needles, only most health care places don’t want you to try and do it.”
He stretched out his left leg for a moment and then said, “Well, I don’t think so. I mean, someone told me there’s a stream somewhere in the woods where the water tastes like your favorite drink but if you try to swim in it, it turns your skin purple for a few days. I haven’t found that one, though.”
She was afraid of drowning.
It just hit him now what that meant.
Lochlann could never drown. He thought about what it must feel like, but he’d never be able to experience it. He’d never know what it would be like to have his lungs fill with water and to panic.
He used to imagine it must be very beautiful. When people were drowning, they gripped the water like they would a lover.
He had very few relationships that didn't end with someone drowning. To be afraid of it before it happened? He could be hell to her.
“It’s just that there are sometimes things in the water,” he said. “The lake by the school has really big koi in it. I saw one the size of my arm once.”
Lochlann thanked her as she took his cup to discard. He was unused to having another person take charge like this and he found that he was relaxing. Since it was growing darker, Lochlann realized that it meant they’d have the perfect view of the sunset from a top the roof.
He felt strangely cold without her arm and there was an ache in his gut that didn’t abate until she slipped her arm back around his once more.
“I had to look for something,” he looked up at the roof as he said this and his voice dropped off to nothing. He wasn’t trying to be dramatic or perfectly vague. If he was a facebook post, Lochlann would have rolled his eyes at his own response. But he couldn’t find the words to describe it.
He cleared his throat.
Right. The roof. Focus, Lochlann. Stop thinking about kissing her or drowning her. Neither are going to happen. You’re going to show her the view and the really cool thing that happens on the roof.
“It’s behind the reference shelves,” he took her, pushing open the door to the library and leading them inside. He seemed more animated now that they were moving. He gave a small wave to the librarian and combed his way through the shelves until he found the one he was looking for.
The door wasn’t exactly hidden, but it was at the end of a bookshelf, meaning you literally stepped through the shelf to enter the stairwell, so it was a big unexpected. Regardless, it was dark inside, and Lochlann reached inside his pocket for the lighter. The tiny flame illuminated the stairs for them to walk up without hazard.
When they reached the top he smiled at her and said, “We’re here.”
He opened the door.
The whole of the island seemed to be spread out before them. There was a small rail around this flat part of the roof, although it was clear there were higher towers in the distance. The city was visible on the horizon and so was a glimpse of the wide, blue ocean where the sun was finally starting to dip behind.
Ooc: I’m so sorry I don’t know how my posts keep spiraling into these long novels
I also took some liberty at the end there to get them to the roof—feel free to let me know if I went too far and I can go back and edit.
He liked her wistful smile.
Lochlann had a visual of himself kissing her when she smiled like that but he bit the inside of his cheek until he tasted blood and reminded himself that he probably would be tasting blood if he thought about kissing her again, and he most definitely did not want that.
Well, he did.
But he didn’t let himself.
“I have an older brother and a younger sister,” Lochlann said. “They’re both back in the states with my parents. I miss Lilly a lot. She came to see my graduate and I think she wanted to come to the academy, but I think she’ll probably stay in the states. It’s been a while since I’ve seen them. Do you go back home at all?”
The last time Lochlann went home had been a disaster. His family wasn’t thrilled to see him back, which was to be expected after all. He wasn’t exactly marked cleared and they were really hoping he’d have an education that would actually be useful to them. But the awkwardness of his family was fine. It was the unexpected arrival of a girl pretending to be his girlfriend that made the last visit so uncomfortable.
When the topic shifted back to the water and fears, Lochlann shifted his weight to his right leg. He considered her fear of heights and strangers in the dark and said, “Well, I don’t know if you’ll like the roof then. But if it makes you feel any better I would not be upset if you wanted to tell someone where we’re going. Also, I promise not to make you look over the edge.”
Lochlann wondered if he was supposed to admit one of his fears in return. After a moment’s hesitation he said, “I hate needles. I mean, I hate other people with needles, only most health care places don’t want you to try and do it.”
He stretched out his left leg for a moment and then said, “Well, I don’t think so. I mean, someone told me there’s a stream somewhere in the woods where the water tastes like your favorite drink but if you try to swim in it, it turns your skin purple for a few days. I haven’t found that one, though.”
She was afraid of drowning.
It just hit him now what that meant.
Lochlann could never drown. He thought about what it must feel like, but he’d never be able to experience it. He’d never know what it would be like to have his lungs fill with water and to panic.
He used to imagine it must be very beautiful. When people were drowning, they gripped the water like they would a lover.
He had very few relationships that didn't end with someone drowning. To be afraid of it before it happened? He could be hell to her.
“It’s just that there are sometimes things in the water,” he said. “The lake by the school has really big koi in it. I saw one the size of my arm once.”
Lochlann thanked her as she took his cup to discard. He was unused to having another person take charge like this and he found that he was relaxing. Since it was growing darker, Lochlann realized that it meant they’d have the perfect view of the sunset from a top the roof.
He felt strangely cold without her arm and there was an ache in his gut that didn’t abate until she slipped her arm back around his once more.
“I had to look for something,” he looked up at the roof as he said this and his voice dropped off to nothing. He wasn’t trying to be dramatic or perfectly vague. If he was a facebook post, Lochlann would have rolled his eyes at his own response. But he couldn’t find the words to describe it.
He cleared his throat.
Right. The roof. Focus, Lochlann. Stop thinking about kissing her or drowning her. Neither are going to happen. You’re going to show her the view and the really cool thing that happens on the roof.
“It’s behind the reference shelves,” he took her, pushing open the door to the library and leading them inside. He seemed more animated now that they were moving. He gave a small wave to the librarian and combed his way through the shelves until he found the one he was looking for.
The door wasn’t exactly hidden, but it was at the end of a bookshelf, meaning you literally stepped through the shelf to enter the stairwell, so it was a big unexpected. Regardless, it was dark inside, and Lochlann reached inside his pocket for the lighter. The tiny flame illuminated the stairs for them to walk up without hazard.
When they reached the top he smiled at her and said, “We’re here.”
He opened the door.
The whole of the island seemed to be spread out before them. There was a small rail around this flat part of the roof, although it was clear there were higher towers in the distance. The city was visible on the horizon and so was a glimpse of the wide, blue ocean where the sun was finally starting to dip behind.
Ooc: I’m so sorry I don’t know how my posts keep spiraling into these long novels
I also took some liberty at the end there to get them to the roof—feel free to let me know if I went too far and I can go back and edit.