Picasso wrote:
Aweh, thank you! You're quite amazing, as well.
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Lily cursed angrily, sifting through the mass of napkins, plastic utensils, and takeout menus in the kitchen’s drawers, looking for something to write with. She couldn’t help thinking that for someone who wrote music for living, pencils and pens were scarce—almost nonexistent around his place. Or at least when she needed one of them. She sat on one of the barstools set in front of the kitchen island, taking a minute to think. She had her chin resting on the palm of her hand before Beckett’s familiar voice sent her nearly toppling off the stool. “God, Beckett! You nearly scared me to death!” she exclaimed, hand pressed to her heart, as if the touch would somehow calm its beating down. “Breaking in?” She blew a stray hair off her face before wiggling the plastic cup of coffee toward him. “Really? Does breaking in usually involve free coffee? I don’t think so. As a matter fact, I am nearly ninety-nine-percent certain it doesn’t involve free beverages. Ninety-nine-percent, amazing I know.” She waited for him to reach for the coffee before pulling it away from him, quickly placing it back onto the counter behind her. She was horrible when she was put on the spot. She bit her lip, trying to resist the urge of running her hand through her hair. “And I wasn’t ignoring you. At least, not on purpose.” So maybe this wasn’t entirely true, but it was close enough to the truth. She’d started waitressing at some fancy restaurant a little over a month ago, and had just finally perfected her new schedule. “I’m sorry it’s just I’ve been busy. With work and trying to make friends, learning how to be on my own for the first time in my life. I don’t know anyone here besides you, so I’ve been trying to branch out. Maybe stop feeling like tourist every time I lose my way on the subway.” She let out a small laugh, “And you know how many times I end up losing myself on the subway.” She picked up his coffee from the counter, trying to ignore the fact that he was standing in front of her, sporting only a towel around his waist. She’d get to that after she got off the hook. “So what do you say? Apology accepted? You get a free coffee if you say yes,” she sang out, gently shaking the plastic cup out in front of her.
Noah, showered and now fully awake, made himself some breakfast. He had never been much of a cook, living off of microwave meals, takeout, and cereal for as long as he could remember. He had some sort of oatmeal in front of him now, bland and watery. It was the only thing he had left in his kitchen, having not cooked his own food for nearly a month. He didn’t even know why he’d bothered today. His head still throbbed, his nausea repressing any sort of appetite he would have otherwise had. He couldn’t help wondering, while pushing around the oatmeal in its bowl, what Waverly would be doing right now. It was nearly one in the afternoon, and she was probably up. He texted her, spoon of oatmeal in his mouth: “My breakfast sucks and I hate you for not replying. You should probably be a good friend to me and help in tending to my booboo (headache, the worst of its kind) J ” Being honest, he just wanted an excuse to see her. It’d been a while since she'd last visited, and he hoped they could maybe hang out, even for a bit. Maybe the normalcy of their hangout would help him suppress the fact that he liked her, really, really liked her. He didn't really know or understand, how or when it had happened. But it had, and Noah was completely at a loss as to what to do. He didn't fall for girls this way, or ever for that matter. He was casual about these kind of things, nonchalant when it came to relationships. He hated being on the other side of them for once, completely unaware on how to stop being friends and somehow move to more.