Bonnie was nice. She was a good dog, Cordelia thought. The thought was slow, lazy, taking its time curling through her mind, twisting through the lovely pink fog of addictive substances. Cordelia reached down to scratch at the dog's head as she slept.
Cordelia had been crossfaded since eight pm on the first of May, and had no intention of being sober for the rest of the month.
Perhaps 'intention' wasn't quite the right word -- she had, briefly, considered being sober for the event, like she had been the first anniversary. That one had been particularly bad for her -- the shock of the passage of linear time had shaken her out of her dissociative fugue state and she had cried for days. The year after she had drunk, and cried, but it had felt -- less. Just, less.
Now she was well in the practice of self-medication, both throughout the year and this month in particular. Nicotine for work, cannabis to soften the edges of the world, wine to dull the pain of memory, draught of peace to stop the churn of 'what-ifs', caffeine to keep her awake and away from nightmares. It was the furthest thing from healthy, but, hey, Michael had gotten blackout drunk for a full weekend in April. It wasn't as if she was alone in wanting to drown, this time of year.
"Hm?" Cordelia said, Edith's words -- like everything she had said since meeting Cordelia out here -- took time to process through the cotton in her ears. "Seems time, though," she said slowly, sipping at her bottle. "Like, the book, it -- its bookends, on the column, isn't it? You've got to do something -- nouveau. Change the discourse again, sumthat. Get out of the Quibbler."
Perhaps she should have warned Edith that she was going to be this well out of it. Oh well. Cordelia took another swig.
Cordelia watched the muggle skater with unmerited focus. "Oh, it's good," Cordelia said, with a small shrug. "It's... it's going." Cordelia blinked twice, slow. "Told my boyfriend about it, finally. Last week." She wondered when Edith told hers about her book -- not that it was any of her business. Except, she wondered, and she wondered if it all was different when your boyfriend wasn't the center of a whole chapter of your book. "Went -- it went."