She didn’t move right away to take the items, out of some kind of loyalty to her plan to avoid him forever (discomfort?), or perhaps a desire to keep him here a little longer (manipulation, then). She felt nervous and flighty, jittery inside her skin, and most of her feelings — longing or questioning or discomfort — shifted into the same thing, after a while: guilt.
“Oh,†she said, relying on the filler word as her concerned frown deepened a little, and became tinged with confusion. She hadn’t expected him to get her anything for her birthday — not that it was entirely unwelcome, or anything, but —
“Oh.†It came out again, more understanding this time. He’d ordered it before. Before. She wondered what he’d say if she described the way her life was split up into these sorts of chapters. He’d probably understand, she thought; his life revolved around befores and afters, too. Before his mother and sister had gotten into that vanishing cabinet. After her. She shook her head slightly, dismissing whatever madness had caused her to compare herself and their breakup to the loss of his family. Undermining their relationship and its impact on him felt wrong, though.
There were too many contradictions.
“I see,†she said, finally pushing herself to close the gap and reach for the gift, and the key. “Thank you,†she said, trying desperately to ignore the way her fingers had just brushed his thumb as she curled her arms to herself. There was some kind of deep, regretful, nostalgic ache building inside of her. The fact that she’d been with Killian minutes ago, feeling comfortable and open and safe, but was now here with Phillip feeling the exact opposite was a juxtaposition that hurt. There was a tenseness in her stomach, a pang at the end of every exhale, things shifting below the surface that felt too powerful to remain so hidden.
She was half a step away again now, and waiting for something — for him to leave, maybe. If all he’d wanted was to give these to her, then shouldn’t he leave? Should she leave? She couldn’t even bring herself to glance towards the common room entrance, though. Her eyes were fixed on him. There was silence for a little too long, and she wondered if he wanted her to go, wanted her to talk, wanted anything from her at all. That ache built and built inside her until she felt like just looking at him was painful. She didn’t look away.
“I cut my hair,†she said quietly, tentatively. It was obvious, but it was the only new thing that had happened to her since they’d spoken. What else could she say? That she’d cried for days? That she hadn’t wanted to come back to school? That she spent an unhealthy amount of time pouring over notes he’d written her, old conversations of theirs that were enshrined in parchment and ink forever? “I, think I hate it,†she said instead.