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Chapter 15: Unexplained Boundaries
Craft rested his arms on the chairâs backrest. He slumped forwards, hiding his mouth behind his arms, and his eyes drooped. Nightshade was his mirror image as she hid her mouth behind her knees, sitting like a shrimp on the bed, her only comfort the blanket wrapped around her.
It didnât make sense to him how they could both be like this. Theyâd only known each other for less than a day â hell, less than an hour.
She looked at him again and smiled, even if subdued. âItâs okay. I understand,â she said. How could he believe that? Who understands being pushed away?
âNo, Iâ â his words got caught up in his throat. âDonât misunderstand,â âI donât hate you,â âIâm looking forward to knowing you,â and âIâm scared to explainâ â all these thoughts wanted to become words at the same time.
But if they all did, then nothing would, and in the end, nothing did. He thought Nightshade might say something, glancing towards her, but she didnât. She just kept her head bowed down, keeping her ear pointed his way. No matter how long he didnât speak, she just waited.
It amazed him more than it pained him. Perhaps sheâd gained Nickname Rights for more than just a random encounter.
He took in a deep breath. Patience ought to be rewarded. On his exhale, he let the dozen phrases competing in his brain melt away, leaving one the only survivor. âIâm not ready,â was all he could say.
Nightshadeâs face lit up and she nodded. That puzzled him.
âI said something bad, you know?â he said.
She looked at him with a small gasp, perhaps realizing she was making the wrong face. She put her palms to her cheeks, shook her head, looked away, and covered her mouth. âI-I didnât mean that â erâ â she shook her head again and took a deep breath before looking at him â âI donât think you said a bad thing.â Her gaze flittered between him and her blanket.
Not a bad thing? He rested his gaze on some random spot on the bed. He shook his head. âIsnât it actually?â He looked at her.
âNo, no, itâs really not.â Nightshake shook her head. âWhen you say ânot ready,â that just means âyou still need to prepare,â right? That means thereâs still a chance.â
That confused him for a moment. She hadnât even taken what heâd said as a rejection, but as a source of insight instead. What heâd seen as an infinite line that circumnavigated the globe was just a wall segment in her eyes â something to be acknowledged and walked around.
Craft shifted his head. Nightshade was more amazing than she seemed. âI guess.â
âAnd if youâre preparing, that means youâre still figuring out what to do, which means youâre still a little lostâ¦right?â
He didnât reply.
âH-hey, say something. I canât just keep talking assuming things about you!â She flailed her arms.
You canât assume things about me, huh? Had it been because of what heâd told Amacus earlier that she was being considerate? Or was it really in her nature not to go forward in a conversation without the other person?
Craft recognized the way she was approaching him, too. Approaching someone with curiosity and understanding, trying her best to minimize all assumptions, had also been one of his strategies as an agent. Making someone feel that heâs genuinely interested in them as a person was the first step to building rapport, and with enough rapport, he could make them do things they normally wouldnât.
For a brief moment, he feared that Nightshadeâs friendliness towards him was just a prelude to the same kind of betrayal heâd normally committed. He found it too unusual that she was so intent on befriending him, too unusual for her to be so accommodating.
It shouldâve been a red flag â but this isnât my world.
He shifted his gaze to her. To trust her, even if only a little, was a choice counter to the way he had lived so farâ¦and it was a choice he made every waking second.
Besides â no offense to Amacus â but Nightshade was more of an angel.
He chuckled, showing her a little smile. âYouâre right,â he told her.
She settled down. âGosh.â She laughed a little, expelling the awkward energy. She looked at him, perhaps to see if they were both laughing, but she saw something a lot more interesting. âThatâs the realest smile Iâve seen from you.â
He jerked back slightly. âThatâs depressing to hear.â
âHuh? No, really â Iâm actually surprised!â
âYou only know how to inflict damage.â
She opened her mouth, stopped, opened it again â but no. She churned through every possibility, plotting conversational battle tactics with her mindâs chess wizard, but there was just nothing she could say to win. She started to make an annoyed purring noise like a grumpy cat, and with every consideration, modification, and final rejection of her dwindling list of next moves, her annoyed purring just got louder and louder.
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Somehow, her enemy had stopped being Craft â and had begun to be herself.
So lively. Craft chuckled, his earlier smile lingering. He hadnât even known that anyone could make that noise; another one of those odd cultural differences, most likely. Sheâd only been kind to him, even when heâd screwed up. Might as well throw her a fish bone.
âItâs not that I donât smile,â he explained. âItâs just rare to find someone who can make me do that.â
âAh.â She put her hands on her cheeks. Her ability to use language degraded. This was unprecedented. âAh. Am embarrassed.â
Craftâs eyes widened; the line between speaking the truth and being smooth was dangerously thin, and he didnât want to find himself in the danger zone of proto-romantic misunderstanding.
He raised his hands in a stop gesture. âDonât read into it.â
She hid behind her arms and shook her head. âAm still embarrassed.â
âDonât.â
âCanât not.â
He narrowed his eyes. Years of deep cover work had given him lots of practice with mirroring people on the fly, matching their strangeness, mannerisms, and turns-of-phrase so well that he could meet someone, talk to them for a minute, dump their body in a backalley dumpster five minutes later, and replace them in the office before lunch was over â and no one would notice for at least twenty-four hours. Who couldâve predicted that his expertise would eventually bite him in the ass in this very moment?
âAlright,â Craft said. âNo not. Do, then.â
She giggled, peeking out from her hidey spot. âWhat?â Although her mouth was covered by her arms, her eyes still squinted and she shook her head all the while.
Craft shook his head with a smile. Even he didnât know what had come out of his mouth.
Time froze for him as he realized: he was having lively banter with someone he had only met today. He realized he wasnât balancing on a tightrope to cover up an ugly truth; that he was capable of interactions like these at all.
Even if it had just been for a minute, he had successfully lived a moment that was the complete opposite of the life he despised.
â If one such moment could exist, then two wasnât out of reach.
âCraft?â Nightshade asked, concerned.
He snapped out of it. âAh, my bad. I just remembered Iâve still got a pair of shoes to find.â He got up from the chair. âIf you donât feel up to it, you can stay hereâ â
âIâm coming with!â Nightshade flipped away the blanket, and in a blink, she was on her feet. âWeâve only been through half the pile, after all.â
âHey.â
She paused to look at him. âYes?â
Craft paused. He didnât want to ask this; Counter-intelligence 102, you shouldnât be letting the enemy know youâre thinking about them. Even so, he had to ask. âItâs a little late for this, but why are you being so nice to me?â
She nodded once with a smile. âOh! Well, you just remind me of my bestie. You sort of have the same vibe, so I thoughtâ¦â She poked her fingertips together â then she clapped with a big smile from a banger idea that couldnât possibly go wrong. âAh! You should meet her! She should be in town by now, so say hi to her if you see her!â
He was glad that she was glad to answer. It meant that he was wrong. He needed to be wrong more often.
That said, it sounded oddly like âsomeone just like himâ was nearby. Did that mean heâd be looking in a mirror, or was Nightshade just too flexible in her comparisons? He couldnât know what to expect.
âSheâs got RGB hair. Really hard to miss,â Nightshade continued.
He hoped that was just a metaphor for hair color, and not literal LED strips growing out of her scalp. There was a country whereâ¦yeah, better not think about it.
Anyway, if itâs a friend of Nightshadeâs, she couldnât possibly be weirder than her. It didnât hurt to expand his connections, too. âIâll keep that in mind,â he said.
He turned around to leave, but she called out again. âAnd Craft.â He faced her, finding her holding her hands together in trepidation. âYouâre really just taking your time, right?â
Her expression was stiff, head slightly bowed, and she gulped right after saying it. He knew what she was really asking: Youâre not pushing me away, right? Seeing her that way, he wavered between feeling morose â as if their fun just a while ago was all a lie â and hopeful â that she was leaving the door open for him. âI never planned on pushing you away,â he said, âjust inch my way there, if you get me.â
She smiled a little. âThatâs fine.â
Her acceptance of his shortcomings pained him, but that just meant he had to work hard for that future. As long as he kept at it, everything up until now, and all the things he was yet to do, would have been worth it.
***
They stepped out of the temple without Craftâs feet knowing what Amatorian dirt felt like. A draft of wind cooled his skin. It smelled of the musk of a forest undergoing cycles of growth and decay â just like Raffieâs home. He missed her, suddenly.
Nightshade walked backwards past him. âSunâs got you squinting?â
She smiled. It didnât feel real to him; the last half hour didnât feel real to him. The imposterâs nonsense, Amacusâ insistence, and Nightshadeâs understanding â one after the other â shouldnât have been things piled up on a guy whoâd just been breathing for half an hour.
Could he still turn around and ask for a time out? It had all been very unexpected. A moment to process it all would be great.
Nightshade turned and skipped down the cobble path from the temple. âCome on! And donât trip on the pavers!â
Pavers? His gaze homed in on the cobbles on the ground. Goddamn pavers? He clicked his tongue. As a city boy, flat surfaces were the superior surfaces. Well, he didnât mind walking on dirt trails or trekking up mountains, but he had something against half-assed pavers. They would shift with the soil underneath them and end up jutting out by an inch, turning a walk into a game of hopscotch. Gravel roads were only slightly better.
Nightshade turned and waved towards him. âCome on!â
One moment could become two. A road was a road, and if it was the only one in front of him, he had no choice but to take it.
After an uncomfortable one-minute commute on-foot, Craft landed on a fenced clearing. He was happy to find plain dirt.
He caught up to Nightshadeâs back. He was about to file a few complaints about the cobblestone, but he noticed sheâd stopped and stood still right behind a chalk line on the ground.
âIs there something about this?â Craft pointed at it.
âOh, thatâs just the templeâs property line.â Nightshade chuckled and waved her hand. Had she been talking to anyone else, that would have been the end of that, but it was Craft, and he couldnât ignore her paralanguage.
Not elaborating on something and looking far into the distance with a smile that didnât follow her eyes? That couldnât be anything other than avoiding the topic.
âLetâs wait here for a bit,â she continued. âSomeone I know comes around right around this time. Iâll explain the situation to him, and heâll take you to town.â
Craft nodded. Heâd ignore the problem for now; it didnât seem like a problem for now. Besides, wasnât it was fair that sheâd hide some things from him just as he did from her?
He shouldnât have to think too hard about the lines on the ground and the road ahead. Nightshade had shown to him that walls could be insights, not just obstacles. As long as he took the time to understand them, then one moment could become two, and the second didnât have to be now.
âWaitingâs no problem,â he said.
Nightshade nodded. âThanks.â