40 Frost 120
Afternoon
Afternoon
...continued from So...
Well, fuck.
Aurin froze, eyes lost in a thousand-yard stare. In his mind, he relived their meeting and then many high and low points in their friendship. That first few hours had been a template of sorts, though it didn't always start with Arry pushing a boundary — then the boundary of personal property. It did usually end in a fight. Usually, Aurin became vicious. Now, perhaps, he was trying to break that cycle.
A hundred hurtful things came to mind to say. He wouldn't need his trick to make Arry feel worse than garbage. And he was angry or, at least, anger was part of his reaction to the situation. Why did Arry want more than he could give? Why wasn't what he gave enough? He didn't ask for much. At least, he didn't think he did. Did he think he was in love with Aurin? As if that were possible. Did he think they were going to get married and move into a bigger house and adopt pets and children together?
And Aurin would admit to being a shitty person, but he had tried to be up front with that. With Arry it was always don't say what you want and then wait until he started getting catty to find out what had flown up his skirts this time. It was like he thrived on dramatic displays, as if he wanted to live on a theatrical stage. But Aurin didn't want to. He wanted his spartan safehouse with bars on the window and a lock on the door. He wanted to bullshit with people in the Cabaret and then set that role aside and go back to the darkness.
Arry's words were cutting, but he didn't flinch. Maybe it was all in his head. Sometimes he thought he was properly mad.
"All right," he said finally, his voice devoid of emotion. His eyes fell to the pie Arry hadn't wanted and he began to dig in.