Phillip's problems seemed like nothing compared to everything that Billie was contending with. He had exams, and sure, graduation was looming, but even though most of his stress was self-inflicted, it was still a lot to deal with. Moments like this seemed to erase all of that, even if it was just for a little while, and Phillip was grateful for it. Kissing Billie brought him back to a much simpler summer when they spent afternoons walking Kendrick's dog or visiting Maidstone and evenings writing in their notebooks. No classes, no social pressures, and minimal responsibilities. A time when things were more comfortable, a time Phillip was still clinging to even though it was long gone.
It would never be the same; it never could be. Next summer, he would graduate, and he'd have to find a real job. Something that would pay rent wherever he landed because he doubted Winifred's father would let him crash in the spare bedroom again. Not that he'd want to anyway. And although he'd have his place, which would afford them plenty of freedom, he also felt like Kendrick would be less inclined to let her spend all day over there unsupervised. Regardless, Phillip held onto that summertime feeling, wishing he could get it back but knowing it was gone. It was a running theme in his life.
When she pulled away, he smiled again; Phillip felt like he hadn't smiled in weeks. "Yeah," He agreed, closing his eyes as she brushed the hair from his face. It was a two-second spell to trim it, the wizard had known the charm for years, but for whatever reason, he hadn't thought to do it. "So how should we begin?" Billie had asked, and Phillip knew what she meant but pulled her close again with a new sense of smugness. "I have a few ideas," He teased, murmuring into her neck and refusing to let her go. Phillip breathed in, loving the scent of cold winter air and her handmade soaps mixed, and realized it was quite possibly his favorite smell in the entire world.
"Alright," Sighing, Phillip finally relented and dropped his hands from her waist. "Your exam will be one-part theoretical and one-part practical," While Phillip was fully aware that Billie already knew this, he couldn't help but lead in this way. He knew that she was probably far better at the former than the latter; books and essays seemed far more in her wheelhouse than hexes and counters. And if he were going to help her, then he'd have to help her with the hard stuff, even if he was particularly looking forward to trying to curse his girlfriend. "How would you feel about practicing the hex-deflection spell?"