Lochlann had not forgotten that day he'd been so close to getting everything he'd ever wanted before the rain washed it away. But the rain didn't wash everything away.
It didn't wash away his hope.
Hope was not a thing Lochlann had often. The feeling was unfamiliar and fragile. Lochlann felt like someone had given him a baby bird and asked him to care for it and keep it alive, but left him with no instructions or even the faintest idea of how to nurture this faint hope until it could grow into something stronger and with wings.
Lochlann did know what happened the last time he tried to keep secrets. He still dreamed about the taste of her blood in his mouth. Now, Lochlann dreamed about the taste of her mouth on his and he wanted to keep it this way. He wouldn't poison this hope with his secrets. Not this time
He was carrying this hope as he approached the address Addy had left him. He was also carrying a bottle of whisky with a bow on it....and, a carnation with the stem slipped into the bottle. He brought her the good kind of whisky, the kind that she used to do shots of at the bar with the scary owner who Lochlann still couldn't look in the eye after he'd made Addy late for work that one time. He considered that a better house warming gift than a plant.
He'd spent a long time looking at plants but kept getting overwhelmed by the idea to bring her flowers instead. Would she even like them? Addy was a very hands-on, practical kind of girl. It's what he liked about her. She was his best friend.
And Lochlann had no idea to express to her that he kind of wanted to be more than just best friends.
He was dressed in his normal ensemble: jeans and a dark shirt with his necklace tucked beneath it. His shorter hair tickled the back of his neck. He glanced at the paper he'd written the address on.
Here went nothing.
Lochlann held his hope tight to him as he wrapped his fingers against the doorframe.
@Trahnael
It didn't wash away his hope.
Hope was not a thing Lochlann had often. The feeling was unfamiliar and fragile. Lochlann felt like someone had given him a baby bird and asked him to care for it and keep it alive, but left him with no instructions or even the faintest idea of how to nurture this faint hope until it could grow into something stronger and with wings.
Lochlann did know what happened the last time he tried to keep secrets. He still dreamed about the taste of her blood in his mouth. Now, Lochlann dreamed about the taste of her mouth on his and he wanted to keep it this way. He wouldn't poison this hope with his secrets. Not this time
He was carrying this hope as he approached the address Addy had left him. He was also carrying a bottle of whisky with a bow on it....and, a carnation with the stem slipped into the bottle. He brought her the good kind of whisky, the kind that she used to do shots of at the bar with the scary owner who Lochlann still couldn't look in the eye after he'd made Addy late for work that one time. He considered that a better house warming gift than a plant.
He'd spent a long time looking at plants but kept getting overwhelmed by the idea to bring her flowers instead. Would she even like them? Addy was a very hands-on, practical kind of girl. It's what he liked about her. She was his best friend.
And Lochlann had no idea to express to her that he kind of wanted to be more than just best friends.
He was dressed in his normal ensemble: jeans and a dark shirt with his necklace tucked beneath it. His shorter hair tickled the back of his neck. He glanced at the paper he'd written the address on.
Here went nothing.
Lochlann held his hope tight to him as he wrapped his fingers against the doorframe.
@Trahnael