Twelve || Ludicrous

Start from the beginning
                                    

Leaves fell to the ground in an arrayment of yellows and reds. The mornings were a fog of icy breath and damp air. Yet, Bash wore his aviator sunglasses in the white light that couldn’t cut through the thick mist, and rolled over crunchy leaves on his bicycle in a t-shirt, breathing in the earthy seven a.m. air.

I followed in a sweatshirt with the hood up, watching him silently weave ahead of me. We hadn’t spoken since he picked me up from Henry’s. I was still sleepy, and the cold was flowing through my bloodstream, but I didn’t want to say anything. The quiet was comfortable and watching him was as mesmerizing as watching ocean waves lap against the shore.

“Fall is the loveliest season,” he told me the day before, “I want to soak in the last of it at when it’s at its most honest.”

What he wanted to do was watch the world wake up; so, we began following this mindless route at six in the morning.

Bash looked over his shoulder at my half-lidded eyes with a serene smile. “Peaceful, isn’t it?”

My voice was a scratchy reply, “I could fall asleep.”

“Do you want to stop?”

I shook my head, but he still came to a slow stop before a closed corner shop in the middle of downtown Ashwood Creek. With a gentle chuckle, he leaned forward and dropped a kiss at the corner of my mouth.

“I’m sorry I suggested we do this so early in the morning. I know you stayed up late writing that paper,” he apologized for the second time since he we left Henry’s.

“You were writing last night, too,” I reminded him. “We’re even.”

He watched me pull the sleeves of my sweatshirt over my hands and then pulled a light jacket from his backpack and wrapped it around my shoulders. “I like what I write about, though.”

I smiled gratefully and stuck my arms through the sleeves, sinking contently into the warmth. “And what is it you write about?” I asked curiously for the hundredth time.

He always avoided the question like he was embarrassed. The second time I met him he blushed behind a book. Now, he turned his face away and scratched at his jaw. I was fond of his nervous laughter and the inquisitive look he would cast off into the distance. It made me wonder how I looked in moments like these.

He licked his lips and met my eyes with a foux confidence that made me smile. “I write about you, Jovial.”

The smile vanished, but he held the coolness in his eyes like it wasn’t painful. “Me? Why would you—”

“You are the single most extraordinary human being I have ever encountered,” he cut in quickly, like he was afraid he’d lose his confidence if he didn’t explain himself fast enough. “To capture your very essence is...the most difficult thing I’ve ever tried to do. That’s why I drink when I do it. It makes it easier to access my feelings for you—because I find you terribly intoxicating.”

He looked at me now like he was bleeding out in front of me, nervously begging with his eyes in wonderment of what to do. My mind went blank. Every word in the English language disappeared from my vocabulary for what felt like forever. He shuffled uncomfortably. 

“How can you feel so...strongly?” I asked out loud.

“Because...Jovie, I care for you—I love you...and I know you don’t want to hear that because it scares you, and I don’t care if you love me. I don’t care if you never say it back. When I’m around you it feels easy. I want to learn your bad habits and hear you laugh. You are absolutely going to break my heart and I dread it. It terrifies me. But, it’s you. I’m so lucky to know you and to love you. If you walk away now...”

 A few heartbeats of silence followed his hanging sentence, and he ran his hands through his hair and looked around the empty streets like he felt too exposed in this giant space. Like, nothing was tangible except for him and I but I was untouchable.

I swallowed thickly, suddenly feeling too hot in his jacket. It felt like I held out my hand with an expectant stare, so he ripped out his heart and placed it there. He challenged me to squeeze it dry, but I was too stunned to do anything but wonder why. It was so heavy.

“It would be a little awkward to walk away since I’m sitting on a bike wearing your jacket.”

He paused and looked back at me with glassy eyes. “What?”

I let out a breath and braced my hands on the handle bars tightly. “I...don’t know what I should say.”

He squeezed his eyes shut. “Spare me and don’t say anything at all. I’ve thoroughly embarrassed myself and I—”

“I’m not the person I was a few months ago,” I interrupted. “I took a chance with you and I’m still learning.” His large blue eys snapped open to gaze at me achingly. “Bash, I’m not going anywhere. This is just new.”

He leaned backward like it was the first time he was looking at me—all unfamiliar and inquisitive. “I will never not stop learning you, will I?”

I reached between us and pulled him to me, pressing my lips to his with a certain strength I hadn’t utilized before.

“The mystery is part of the allure, is it not?” I teased against his lips.    

“I want to say something completely ludicrous, again,” he admitted quietly.

It made my chest tighten uneasily. I wanted to hear him say it, but the words scared me—gave me too much power. So, I bit my lip and brushed a strand of gold hair out of his eyes.

“It will make me nervous,” I warned.

His nose brushed against mine. “It will make me nervous, too.”

I kissed him again, and he said those timid words, and I knew I was too far in to back out quietly and without the same detachment I would have before. Funny how that works: love. For the inexperienced it catches you like a gas leak in the middle of the night. Quiet and deadly.

I love you.

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