CorinTraven
Aggressive Levels of Enthuse
His response was predictably humorless, always so serious and rigid in his thinking, not having the same reckless abandon as his young companion. She sucked on her cheeks, rolling her eyes up to the swirling sky still visible through gaps in the interwoven trees as if to demonstrate the attitude he critiqued her for. It wasn’t her fault that he’d forgotten how to have fun, that he’d been caught in so many thunderstorms that they’d lost any sense of excitement for him, that he could only think of the consequences and not the experience. She didn’t prod him further, undercut by his annoyance and taking his signal to be quiet, not play when there was no room for games.
Josephine took the cigarette he offered with thanks, pulling on it gently as he put a match to its end and began the cherried ember. She cleared her throat, more prone to a bout of beginner’s cough in response to the harsh smoke, but swallowed any novice urge and stood very much the same as he, looking out into the rain, and then up to him as he danced around the subject which she dreaded to discuss: where they were going.
The girl’s shoulders curled in as if to shrink beside him, one hand coming to cradle the other’s elbow which kept the cigarette drifting through the air. She breathed out a sigh, nearly a groan, shifting from foot to foot, unable to find a comfortable stance. “Yeah?” She answered, a bit of frustration in her tone, tensing beside him, placing her eyes on the ground as she often did when she hoped to avoid him. “Okay. And what do you think I should do- What do you want to do?” Her voice came through gritted teeth, scuffing the ground and staring at the toes of her boots. “I don’t have any good options. I’m a dead girl walking, you’d say, right? So, you want me to go back to New York, and then you can collect on returning my animated corpse . That’s fair, someone ought to benefit from all of this, and he’s promised you a lot. He’s good at that, promising. I can’t blame you for wanting to get paid... Okay. Fine. That’s what you want, what I should just…accept, just do it because there’s no way out for me. Right?” She wouldn’t look at him as she spoke, voice falling flat and a dryness tightening her throat. She didn’t want to go back, she never would, but in her mental preparation for this conversation, she’d already decided his motivations- though she hadn’t quite figured out any argument to divert them. Josephine didn’t want to fight with him about it, she couldn’t bring herself to face it, and so she hoped to beat him to the punch, taking a long pull off of the cigarette and letting the smoke sink flippantly from her parted lips.
“Fine. Whatever, it doesn’t matter. It’s all the same to me. Josephine Sawyer is dead, only thing undecided is what date to mark the stone. We’ll do what you want. I don’t care.” She said with strained finality, one arm wrapped around her midsection and clawing her side. It suddenly became very apparent how cramped the cut was for them both, Josephine craving space with rising turmoil but there was no where to go but the rain. It was not surprising the girl who’d runaway from home was ever-the-escapist. She turned and fled the couple strides deeper into the inclusion, to the other end of his tarp, and stared hard into the dark, uninteresting dead end with an intense concentration. It wasn’t safe to feel the distress, and fear, and dread that rose at the mention of returning home, not with him here and the vulnerability and exposure that meant for her. Staring out, she pushed that away, swallowed it hard and forced it from retching back up when it bucked and fought its way toward the forefront of her consciousness. No not here, not now, not ever.
Josephine took the cigarette he offered with thanks, pulling on it gently as he put a match to its end and began the cherried ember. She cleared her throat, more prone to a bout of beginner’s cough in response to the harsh smoke, but swallowed any novice urge and stood very much the same as he, looking out into the rain, and then up to him as he danced around the subject which she dreaded to discuss: where they were going.
The girl’s shoulders curled in as if to shrink beside him, one hand coming to cradle the other’s elbow which kept the cigarette drifting through the air. She breathed out a sigh, nearly a groan, shifting from foot to foot, unable to find a comfortable stance. “Yeah?” She answered, a bit of frustration in her tone, tensing beside him, placing her eyes on the ground as she often did when she hoped to avoid him. “Okay. And what do you think I should do- What do you want to do?” Her voice came through gritted teeth, scuffing the ground and staring at the toes of her boots. “I don’t have any good options. I’m a dead girl walking, you’d say, right? So, you want me to go back to New York, and then you can collect on returning my animated corpse . That’s fair, someone ought to benefit from all of this, and he’s promised you a lot. He’s good at that, promising. I can’t blame you for wanting to get paid... Okay. Fine. That’s what you want, what I should just…accept, just do it because there’s no way out for me. Right?” She wouldn’t look at him as she spoke, voice falling flat and a dryness tightening her throat. She didn’t want to go back, she never would, but in her mental preparation for this conversation, she’d already decided his motivations- though she hadn’t quite figured out any argument to divert them. Josephine didn’t want to fight with him about it, she couldn’t bring herself to face it, and so she hoped to beat him to the punch, taking a long pull off of the cigarette and letting the smoke sink flippantly from her parted lips.
“Fine. Whatever, it doesn’t matter. It’s all the same to me. Josephine Sawyer is dead, only thing undecided is what date to mark the stone. We’ll do what you want. I don’t care.” She said with strained finality, one arm wrapped around her midsection and clawing her side. It suddenly became very apparent how cramped the cut was for them both, Josephine craving space with rising turmoil but there was no where to go but the rain. It was not surprising the girl who’d runaway from home was ever-the-escapist. She turned and fled the couple strides deeper into the inclusion, to the other end of his tarp, and stared hard into the dark, uninteresting dead end with an intense concentration. It wasn’t safe to feel the distress, and fear, and dread that rose at the mention of returning home, not with him here and the vulnerability and exposure that meant for her. Staring out, she pushed that away, swallowed it hard and forced it from retching back up when it bucked and fought its way toward the forefront of her consciousness. No not here, not now, not ever.
Last edited: