cw: mentions of SA
He wasn’t just confused, and they both knew it.
Are you fucking serious? It replayed in her head immediately, as if on cue.
Billie felt — felt what? — Felt
something. It wasn’t frustration or irritation, and it certainly wasn’t anger, but there was an edge to it that she wasn’t used to. There was hurt there of course, but by now she’d come to expect to feel that wherever he spoke to her — this twisted her more than that.
“Confused?†she repeated, her voice tight and a little high-pitched. She almost wanted to laugh at the absurdity of this entire thing. She was feeling faraway again, nervousness shifting to anxiousness, shifting to something that made it difficult for her to be present. She unfolded her arms and clenched her hands into fists around the bottom hem of her dress, adjusting it again and feeling her nails digging into her palms. She was coming
down from the panic, she thought firmly, trying not to let it build again.
A distant, detached part of her was marvelling a little at how her idiot brain could be wondering the most ridiculous inane things (did he like her dress? Did he think she looked nice?) in the most
catastrophic way, at a time like this. She was too drunk, too upset, too anxious to handle the stress of crowds or strangers kissing her,
or was happening right in front of her. And yet, it still felt like life-or-death level importance suddenly, that he thought she looked pretty. Ridiculous.
She glanced up when he came closer, frowning when he spoke. “No,†she said immediately, the question taking her by surprise. Then, understanding what he was asking, she shook her head and said it again more firmly, for emphasis. “
No. Nothing like that.†Maybe a little like that, but not the way he meant it. Her eyes were wet again, but she wasn’t crying. Phillip was sitting beside her again; she should really make herself smaller, she thought. If she cared about him, she should really move away, do her best to compose and contain herself, for him. She should, she should.
She didn’t.
“He just — we were drinking.†Her knee was still bouncing, and she had goosebumps all over now. She had an anxious, wired sort of energy about her as she turned to him, the words overflowing as she thought them. “And he kissed me. And I didn’t really want him to.†She hadn’t felt comfortable kissing that man, and hadn’t felt comfortable saying
no. The latter had won out until the former had become too demanding, and the whole thing had reminded her of another time she’d felt caught between the two. She’d felt off, and hadn’t been able to find her friends.
Then she’d panicked.
“I don’t want to kiss anyone else,†she said suddenly, her tone tinged with both disbelief (that he would ever think conversely) and pleading (for him to understand) as she swapped tenses to the present. It felt so off to her; her environment, his anger. He didn’t seem as angry asking if someone had hurt her. Why? Was he the only one allowed to do that? Billie shook her head, looking away from him. That was unfair, and she knew it. Later, she’d feel especially guilty for that thought. “I don’t want to be this drunk,†she added, closing her eyes again, squeezing her hands a little tighter.