“Ahh!†Tomie made a dramatic sound as Benny slipped, nearly taking her with him. She was strong, though, and managed to pull him up in the end with some effort. “Theeeere we go,†she said, heaving him up the last little bit. He got settled to her side, and Tomie got comfy too, smiling to herself. She pulled her backpack around and leaned it in her lap, digging around for some random things she’d nicked from the kitchen. Another packet of crunched up crisps. Two muesli bars. One apple. Tomie never went anywhere without a snack, and it paid off on long days like this, when they’d been out for an unknowable amount of time. She dropped her backpack to the ground behind her when she was done, holding out a muesli bar for Benny before opening her own one.
“You know,†Tomie started, her gaze off in the distance. She was nervous to go back to it, but it’d be a lie to say it hadn’t been on her mind since they’d almost talked about it earlier. The mood was different now, though, and while she’d be happy to avoid talking about JR or quidditch or the whole rejection thing forever, the bit about Benny not feeling good enough was like a little prickle in her sock or something; it demanded attention.
Plus, they were best friends. Even hard things were doable together, right?
“JR and me,†she said — another attempt at starting. “We have lots of stuff in common, like quidditch obviously, but it's all really competitive — and that's fun — but there's a kind of... I dunno, like these walls because of it too? Or maybe because we’re really similar but our lives are so different. Or something, I dunno." Tomie shrugged, conscious of making things weirder or being too open about her thoughts. She looked at Benny briefly, thinking about the things they had in common.
Tomie thought of their parents. Immigrants. South East Asians, specifically. Working class families. North Londoners. She and Benny had lived in the same house, gone to the same places all their lives since they were babies. Tomie wanted to say some of this, but she couldn’t think how to word it without being too sappy or too weird, or explicitly talking about being poor or “not exactly from hereâ€, which wasn’t something they really did. “You and me get each other,†she said instead, which felt very reductive. It was shorthand; She thought she and JR got each other too, but in such a different way that she couldn’t begin to explain. This was different.
“I wish we hung out more last term,†she added, taking another bite of her bar.