“Oh no,†she said, her eyes going to the slide too. She liked hearing about it, even the knee-skinning. It felt nice, normal. Last time she was at his house it had been so noisy and busy. Right at this moment felt more like late-night prefect walks together, before. But it wasn’t quite like that, was it? Her life was split so neatly into befores and afters, and Billie wondered if this was going to be another one of them. Before her mother went to prison, after her father died. Before she went to live with her aunt, after she went to stay with Kendrick. New Year’s eve was certainly one of those moments; she already felt like she was living a warped copy of her life, and that was how she’d felt all of those other times, too.
She watched him when he spoke, feeling a touch jittery on the inside of her skin again, a little too tense in her stomach. She nodded, wondering what he meant by curious about everything. Usually, she wasn’t quite so bad at this – speaking to people, connecting. She was no social butterfly, but conversational flow and motivations usually wasn’t so difficult for her to discern. Her feelings were affecting her perspective too heavily; it was hard to understand his motivations through the filter of what she thought he should or shouldn’t want from her.
She also wondered what things would upset him. Her first thought was the way she felt about her father; the grief, the yearning. She’d lost a whole future when he’d died, but Killian probably didn’t want to hear the details of what she missed most about the man, or what she was most sad she wouldn’t get to experience. It was unfair to share that particular perspective – a daughter’s take – she already knew that. She nodded as he spoke, waiting for him to finish it all before she answered.
How was she feeling? “I’m tired,†she said. Her heart gave a small squeeze when she said it, like it was a confession. “It isn’t really going how I imagined.†She looked at the ground, feeling that need to defer, to minimise, again. She forced herself to push through. She felt vulnerable. “But if I’m honest, then, I suppose I’m still…†Scared. Terrified. Terrified was the word, but she couldn’t say it out loud – it sounded ridiculous, presumed too much, was too dramatic. So she settled on: “Nervous. That – for example – if I talk about sad things that you’ll feel bad, or. Something.†Or manipulated, she finished. “I don’t know. I’d understand if you didn’t trust me.†She closed her eyes, her head resting on the chain once more. She felt drained, but she knew he’d react to that, so she had to keep talking. “Or if you didn’t want to be my friend anymore, I’d understand. So. Maybe it’s just my feelings –“ she let go of the chain she wasn’t leaning on and moved a hand to her chest again, curling her fingers lightly into the fabric of her top. “– but I guess it feels a little confusing that you’d want anything else.â€
How could she say that she just didn’t want him to feel bad, without him explicitly hearing the unspoken rest of that thought – that she prioritised his feelings first of all, and that hers didn’t really matter? She’d answer any question, but when given the space to talk, what did she want to talk about? How could she want anything without knowing what he wanted? She kept her eyes shut for a moment, repeating his words in her head. Generally. About this, about the history of it, about telling me, stuff like that. There were a lot of questions there, all deserving of their own monologues, if he was really asking. And of course, a part of her wondered if he was just being polite. “There are so many things,†she said, opening her eyes again, meeting his. “In my mind, I mean.â€