Edith let go of the breath she didn't realize she was holding when he told her he was fine. But her relief that he was fine was short lived, as the next question about why was was there popped into her head. She was under the impression that they had agreed to be friends from a distance, that they would maybe try to be friends again sometime in the future, once she was able to be around him without contemplating ruining his impending nuptials. And she was certain about one thing: that time was not now. She didn't need reminding of the reasons she was avoiding him in the first place.
But he started over, and Edith watched him with raised brows as he spoke more words to her than he had in the past two months combined. She wanted to stop him and ask him about every sentence, why he was so tired, why it was a long night, but most importantly why he was glad to see her. Yet she just stood there watching him, moving no more than offering a slight nod as she listened. Now that he had mentioned it, he definitely did look tired, though she had joined the ranks of the other night-shifters who didn't take pity on people with regular hours who just so happened to be sleepy. Still, it was Elias, and as much as she was determined to not care about him, she did.
She held still as he took a step towards her, resisting the urge to either take a step back to keep the distance or to close the space between them and pull him into a hug. Neither of those seemed like viable options, though. "I'm not tired," she answered honestly, his sudden appearance pushing all thoughts of sleeping to the back of her mind. They could talk, or rather, he could talk since she had done most of the talking the last time they were together, and she could hear him out, and then they could part ways like two adults ending a relationship that they had never had. She could congratulate herself later for being so mature.
"Okay," she agreed after a minute of consideration. Yet as she agreed, a woman walked past them, turning around to take a second look at Elias dressed in robes. "But we should go inside," she offered, motioning to her building. She may have lived in a strange neighborhood to start with, but most of the weirdos moved about at night and now that the sun was coming up, their safest bet was heading indoors. "I'll make coffee." She turned to the door, her keys still in hand, and unlocked it, letting Elias follow her inside. They walked up the stairs in silence and she could feel him watching her as she unlocked the door to her apartment.
She held the door open behind her, closing it and locking it once they were both inside. "Claudine's out," she said in reference to her very old and very muggle roommate, who was on holiday with her son, or grandson, or great-grandson, or all of the above, but point was: she wasn't in and Edith wouldn't need to explain why she had a visitor at dawn. "You can sit, I'll be a moment." The seating options were limited, either the sofa in the small and cramped living room, or the two chairs at a small, round, lace-covered table in the smaller and more cramped corner of the living room that served as the dining room.
Shrugging off her backpack, she hung it on the back of one of the dining chairs, pulling her wand from her pocket as she set about the little kitchenette to make the coffee. It only took her a minute or so to have it ready, and she set down two mismatched mugs full on the coffee table in front of the sofa where Elias was sitting, not wanting to give herself a reason to unintentionally brush against his hand if she had handed it to him. She sat down, keeping a safe distance between them, before picking up her own mug and resuming her quest to look at anything except Elias. "So," she started, "talk."