blinded by the lights, this movie isn't over
take me by the hand, you feel a little colder.
He'd stood her up.
She'd been excited but now she was just upset. He'd owled her and the arranged place had been a café in the centre of London, on neutral ground. The time had been eleven in the morning but Tabitha had been there for ten thirty. She'd picked a seat outside to enjoy the summer sunshine, on the street in clear view and she'd taken the time to make herself look pretty. Her long fiery red hair had been curled, hanging past her slender shoulders and she'd picked out her best dress.
Tabitha had even taken the trouble to bring Zephir a gift. It was an old book, cracked and worn, the subject she took absolutely no interest in; thermodynamics. The last time she'd seen him, he'd been reading a similar book. The night had been awful for her. She'd taken a fall and ran to him for comfort. Comfort she didn't get. He hadn't yelled at her but he'd made some callous remarks, cutting words, words that hadn't left her just yet, even five months on.
She'd sat at the pretty little wrought iron table and bought him a coffee. For all she knew, he could prefer tea. Eleven o'clock turned into half past, the minutes ticked by and with every passing second, Tabby could feel her heart sinking lower and lower. He must have had a change of heart and not had the decency to tell her.
Tabby waited and waited but by the time two o'clock had come, she figured he was a no show and so, she'd gathered herself up, tucked the book under her arm and made her way home. The book now lay in tatters. Once she'd gotten home, she'd hurled at with such force at her bedroom wall that the spine had split, pages scattered all over her bedroom floor. She hadn't bothered to clean it up.
Fine, she told herself as she stood with her door shut, angrily kicking the broken book as she paced. This was getting stupid now. If he didn't need her, then she didn't need him. She nodded but inwardly, the pep talk really hadn't worked. The crux of the matter was that by not turning up, Zephir had really, truly hurt her. It was a physical pain, like he'd jabbed a knife into her ribcage, hilt deep and jiggled it. No matter what she told herself, it didn't change her mind. She was in too deep. She was emotionally invested in Zephir but she felt slighted.
He was the one who said he wanted to get to know her.
He was the one who initiated this.
He was the one who wanted her to play by his rules.
He was the one who'd broken her heart.
The funny thing was, the further she got from Zephir, the closer she got to her parents. Her home life had improved drastically. The fighting had stopped, her mum and dad were more affectionate with each other and Tabby had stopped lying. She lied to protect her dad's feelings, to protect Zephir but enough was enough. Five months was too long and she couldn't help but feel like she was being lead on, dragged along. Fine. She was going to face this entire thing with bitter indifference. No more crying, no more childishness. She needed to grow up. Fast.
Tabitha got changed, slipping into her old pair of jeans, thin jumper and battered sneakers as she balled up her dress and shoved it into her laundry basket, burying it deep beneath her other clothes. She didn't want to be reminded of this day. It was a little after six in the evening as she trudged downstairs and schlepped to the kitchen, her dad the first to look up.
The tall redhead offered him a weak smile. "I'm going out," she declared and her parents shot each other a look. Her dad parted his lips to protest but she held up a hand to try and silence him. "I'm not going to see him," Tabby replied with a shrug of her slender shoulders. There was no need to give that person a name. Everyone knew it was her half-brother. Could she call him that? He didn't feel like a brother, half of otherwise. He felt like a stranger who was messing with her head.
"Sweetie," her dad began, reaching out a hand towards her.
"You can if you want to." Holding herself stiffly, she shook her head, her carefully constructed curls unraveling as she squeezed his hands. "I'm not going to see him ever again," she replied and her voice had a tone of finality that made her mother frown. She smiled again, her upset thinly veiled. "I'm just going for a walk. Besides, we're out of milk," she concluded. "I won't be long." With that, she closed her front door behind her.
She got to her neighbour's garden before giving up. Tabitha sat on the garden wall, the cool summer night breeze kicking up her hair as she stared at her shoes. This was her own fault, though. It was always her fault. She'd been too full on, she'd pushed too hard, she'd forced him into talking to her. The letters had been plentiful at first and he'd seemed interested in how her schooling was going but, like always, they'd dried up. She sat still as she swallowed. Maybe it was her. Maybe she was truly unlovable.
The sudden realisation hit her with such force, she hadn't seen it coming. Unable to help herself, a single tear escaped her eye and made a slow, sad path down her porcelain cheeks before dripping off her chin hand splashing on her thigh. She wasn't stupid, she'd always kind of known that. She had friends but none that she'd really trust. Except Stephen. Stephen would know what to do but he was all the way up in Scotland and she cared for him too much to just knock on his door without warning. He didn't know about Zephir, either. She'd been dying to tell her friend, she needed to tell someone but she daren't, all because she was trying to protect the Healer.
Sat by herself, she recalled various snippets of their conversations. Specifically when she'd told him they were related.
No. I have two sisters and you are not one of them. His words still rang, clear as a bell and they were often repeated when she was upset. Listening to them play back, seeing the way he'd looked at her like she was something he'd trodden in, Tabby let out a sob and the sound sliced through the silence of the sleepy suburban neighbourhood. Pitching forward, she tangled her hands in her hair, pulling them backwards to rest on the nape of her neck. When Zephir was good, he was very good but when he was bad, he was awful.
She reached up to wipe her nose on the back of her left hand, sniffling pitifully as she stood and began to walk. Yeah. A walk. That'd be good. She wanted to tell her dad everything but she couldn't. He'd hurt her too but she loved him, so deeply and to know she might upset him again….well, she couldn't bring herself to do it. Tabitha was used to shouldering burdens. She told herself frequently that she was fine, that she was okay, that she was handling things but it was taking it's toll on her and every day, she felt less and less like the happy sixteen year old she was this time last year.
It didn't take long for her to reach the centre of her little village, the shops weren't that far. Her family lived near a small Muggle town and Tabitha often enjoyed people watching, they were fascinating and oh-so funny. She paused at the curb. Cars were odd things, she didn't truly understand them but the road was mildly busy, a car every few minutes or so as they trundled along. The shop was on the other side and she needed to cross it before a sudden stupid and horribly reckless thought occurred to her;
what if?How fast did those things go? Surely not faster than a broom in a Quidditch game. She chewed on her lower lip, the wind seeming colder as it whipped her hair, the hairs on the back of her arms standing to attention as her slender body let out an involuntary shudder.
It wouldn't hurt.
Tabitha was getting desperate. She so needed to feel
something. Something that wasn't anger or hurt, upset or depression, she needed something new. Exciting. She needed a jolt of adrenaline. A car approached, she could hear the engine in the near distance and she made a split second decision. Taking a quick breath, she waited until the car came closer and she stepped right out into it's path, her big chocolate brown eyes clenched shut, ready for the inevitable impact.