If they didn’t what? Stop?
Frustration wasn’t particularly present in Billie’s roster of common emotions, and especially not like this. In most situations, she tended towards anxiety rather than frustration, and if the feeling was aimed at someone else or someone else’s actions, then it would shift into something that better resembled guilt, or self-chastising instead. Because feeling frustrated towards other people was untoward, and didn’t suit her one bit.
But.
The blonde breathed in through her nose, then exhaled a slow sigh. Her heartbeat had calmed a touch, but it was still thudding away uncomfortably fast in her chest. She should focus on catching her breath, she thought, but the thought was vague at best.
She couldn’t read him especially well right now, and didn’t really have the capacity for sitting here and analysing every little movement or word until she’d tied herself up in knots. Unlike frustration, overthinking was exceptionally common for her — to the point of being more of a default state of being than an activity to partake in, often. So it was pretty strange to be free of it, right now.
To be completely fair, it wasn’t really him that she was frustrated with. And it wasn’t as if the presence of frustration, and lack of overthinking, ruled out any of the other things; she still felt anxious, for example. It had just settled into a dull, ever present sort of buzz in the back of her mind, instead of shaping every little thing that was coming into her brain.
Billie opened her eyes, feeling her eyelashes flutter against the side of his neck. She blinked once or twice instinctively as she waited for her vision to clear; she’d had her eyes closed for what felt like a very long time. On the other side of his neck, she hadn’t stopped drawing slow little circles. If she stretched her thumb high enough, she could feel a little stubble. It was inconsequential, but made her feel nostalgic in such an acute way, for no logical reason. She did it now, running her thumb up to just underneath his chin.
Could she keep telling him that she didn’t want to stop doing this? Did it come off as petulant, maybe? She didn’t particularly care about that, but it was occurring to her slowly that he was actually being pretty clear about what he wanted. So she should really pull herself away from him, let him take her back to the party. The idea made her want to curl up. She wished, suddenly, that instead of straddling him, she was sitting in a way that would make it easier for him to hold her — maybe with her legs to one side, or something. She imagined him stroking her hair. She wanted to kiss him, wanted to do more, but those kinds of things were never the most important parts. She just wanted to be close.
So if she was wishing for things, she thought, then changing the way she was sitting would dissolve into the back of her mind, making space for more important wishes. And that thought made her feel nostalgic, too. Nostalgic and emotional. It all hurt, of course but the hurting was comforting, in a way. She’d rather be hurting with him than without him. Would rather be here than anywhere else and that was true — newly, maybe temporarily — whether he wanted her here or not.
With a little effort, Billie straightened up, pulling back so she could look at him properly. He hadn’t said anything more, and he was still even as she shifted, so she rested her hands on either side of his neck. She slid the cold tips of her thumbs just underneath the collar of his shirt. She'd do anything he wanted, but god she'd give nearly anything to have him want her.
Billie had her eyes shut the whole time they’d been kissing, and as her gaze met his now, she was especially unguarded. Her body felt heavy, and it wasn’t difficult — especially eye to eye, like this — to imagine the heaviness was something more than just alcohol and whatever-hour-of-the-night-it-was (she had no idea, but it was after her usual bedtime, especially these days). She recalled, vaguely, that she’d spent the start of their encounter avoiding his gaze. It seemed so silly now that they were sitting so close, his lips kiss-swollen and his eyes fixed so intently on hers. As if he couldn’t even imagine looking anywhere else. As if he couldn’t imagine wanting to.
Behind her, the leaves of the willow tree fluttered and swayed in the gentle breeze. The wind picked up stray strands of her hair, too. Billie shivered, still only half registering just how cold it was. She exhaled a heavy breath again.
“Then?†she prompted gently. Her tongue felt heavy too. She was sure she’d had more to say, and was sure that it wouldn’t be long before more came, but being eye-to-eye right now felt, to Billie, a little more like being soul-to-soul. It was like the weight had crushed out any other thing she could have said.