Only paying attention to one thing, Phillip could undoubtedly relate to that. For a long time now, Billie had been the center of his universe. He, and everything in his life, revolved around her, and he had never questioned it. The shift had happened without him noticing. He’d gone from being violently independent to needing her opinion on everything. From not wanting to talk to anyone to craving her attention from the moment he woke up to the second he fell asleep. It was such a dramatic change, and yet, it had happened seamlessly. Effortlessly, even, and he hadn’t known how deep he was until something threatened this new balance.
Phillip didn’t have anything else in his life. Billie was it, she was the reason for his entire existence, and that was consuming. And his unhealthy need had nearly blown things up during the first half of the term. Billie had a whole life outside of him; she had friends and responsibilities, hobbies and academics, all sorts of things that did not include him. And when she tried to welcome him to her group, Phillip had only wanted to hold on to their private world more tightly. He’d learned a little about how to meet her halfway, they had resolved some things, but some part of Phillip was still expecting things to be the way they were over the summer. Even if it wasn’t rationale, some selfish part of him assumed she would drop other things to make more room for him because that was what he had done for her.
And yet, right here, right now, back in their bubble, Phillip forgot all of those past worries again. Like Hogwarts was an entirely different timeline, and this moment was the only real one. Some other wizard was worried about Killian, the loud Gryffindors, Billie’s need to be a good Prefect, and her struggle with the Protego spell. This Phillip was only here, holding the hand of the witch that he loved and struggling against the yawn that threatened to spill out of his mouth.
“Glad you thought so,†He replied, turning his eyes back to her as she spoke again. “But I wasn’t.†Phillip wondered if she wanted to hear him explain it to her, but he knew that Billie would never ask, even if she did want him to—especially if she did—so he continued. “I was so scared that I would do something you wouldn’t like.†It was a silly thing to be afraid of, he realized in hindsight, but he’d also had a similar fear earlier tonight. The fact that both moments had happened here as if they were writing a novel and the characters returned to where they started was a comfort.
Phillip watched her eyes, looking for some sign of a reaction, as the thoughts came rushing in. He opened the door to wonder, saying that he had been afraid, and now the fears were popping back up. “Wait, did I?†He asked, not because she had given any indication that he might have, but because his mind wouldn’t allow him not to.