Rapture
somewhere between the sand and the stardust
He had pulled away, and she had let him go. In those last moments, something had changed in him. As though he had become someone entirely new. Or rather, someone old (someone foreign, the person he had been before her gentle touch had coaxed the softness from inside of him). His words had been a punch to her gut, and she had retreated, giving him the space he so clearly needed. She hadn’t even been able to meet his eyes as he had turned to leave. Instead she had left him with only a single word.
“Oh.”
It’s all she had been able to manage. All she had been able to muster as silent pain and uncertainty had suffused her features, invading that single syllable. She hadn’t meant to, but in the short time they had spent together, she had managed to convince herself there was more there than what there must have been. She had managed to convince herself that he cared for her as more than a mere acquaintance.
And so she turned and fled. He had made his invitation, and she had offered him only one last pained glance before she melted into the trees along the river’s edge. She had left without promises, left with only the quiet, unsettling ache in her chest.
But she couldn’t stay away.
She had meant to forget him, to forget their single encounter and pretend as though her life were perfectly normal and complete. But it wasn’t. And she couldn’t forget. So when winter comes around once more, she finds herself at the borders of Tephra. Her heart thrums a rapid beat inside her chest as she stares uncertainly across the damp, misty landscape filled with ever blooming, green vegetation. The heat caresses her skin, so different from the rest of Beqanna, rapidly cooling as fall deepens and fades, the chill of winter sinking its fingers into the land.
She hesitates there, uncertain of her path. She had made it to Tephra, but she is struck suddenly by doubt. Even if she could find him in the decidedly large kingdom, would he truly want her here? Would he be happy to see her after all this time? Perhaps he had forgotten about her by now. Perhaps that small moment by the river (a moment she could never forget) had meant nothing to him.
there is a pulse that echoes of you and I
@[Levi] So I figured I would just move this on over here and catch up on their timeline, lol