Sarah Sabastian (
silentsorrow) wrote in
skymuffins2011-07-31 09:51 pm
[Sept. 7/11] The Gardens, Afternoon
It was not strictly the gardens that she had secreted herself away in. There were nooks and crannies all over the school grounds, filled with benches and trees and flowering bushes and vines. It was one of these, tucked around the very edge of the gardens proper and thus usually overlooked, that Sarah had claimed as her own years ago.
The nook was cold from the presence of spirits for all that none were visible at the moment. A statue of some ancient mage, in flowing robes, stood over her with his hands upraised. His pedestal made an excellent support for her back as she leaned against it and the grass was still soft and green—autumn had not yet touched it. Sarah toyed with the grass, unbothered by the chill of ghosts, and raised her face to the sun. Her lunch had been eaten and she had the afternoon free to do as she wished.
What she wished was to be exactly where she was, alone and forgotten by all but the dead.
The nook was cold from the presence of spirits for all that none were visible at the moment. A statue of some ancient mage, in flowing robes, stood over her with his hands upraised. His pedestal made an excellent support for her back as she leaned against it and the grass was still soft and green—autumn had not yet touched it. Sarah toyed with the grass, unbothered by the chill of ghosts, and raised her face to the sun. Her lunch had been eaten and she had the afternoon free to do as she wished.
What she wished was to be exactly where she was, alone and forgotten by all but the dead.

no subject
"History seems kind of counter-intuitive to me," he explained, still smiling a little. "Like walking backwards. Why retrace your steps when you can't see where you're going, if you can just walk straight ahead and know exactly what's sitting in front of you?"
He could grasp the concept of history, though. After all, he could remember the things he'd done, and the places that he'd been. But digging beyond the very basic, anything that he needed for day-to-day life, tended to give him a headache.
"I don't quite get how you manage it, honestly."
That was actually a bit of praise if you listened closely enough.
no subject
Could he remember everything that had gone on in the book?
Leaning over just a little she tapped his history book then the novel again. Was it possible that he could treat that textbook like the novel? Like a story.
The fact that her head was dipped enough that it would be hard to see the faint ghost of colour on her cheeks was a bonus. She was not used to compliments of any sort.
no subject
This and this and that happened. Why did they suddenly have to be connected?
"And then I start tripping over things, anyhow. Science and math are easy. I can guess the answers before the problems are ever worked through." And that came out a little heavily on his tongue, yes. But it wasn't cheating if it was just intuitive, was it? "When I pick up a book, it's usually so that I can just figure out the ending all over again."
He didn't read a book for the sake of reading it. And he couldn't handle sitting down and watching a movie with some sort of plot resolution in mind.
no subject
Sarah considered that. He had not realized that she would lend him the book. Nor had he realized she would let him sit. But he had seemed to have expected the cold of her skin.
She pulled out a binder and a pen and before she thought about it too hard wrote:
What about me?
Then offered him the binder with a bit of an almost sheepish shrug. She knew she shouldn't ask.
no subject
"What about you?" He bit the inside of his cheek a little, his gaze flicking back toward her. "What can I tell about you, you mean?"
no subject
Sarah thought that she probably shouldn't have asked at all. But it was too late to take the question back.
no subject
And then he frowned.
"I guess... mentioning that I'm pretty new at this wouldn't get me off the hook, huh? I mean, it's not anything personal, but sometimes there are... kind of like blind spots. I can't think past them."
no subject
Well, she thought, scolding herself for being a fool. If he did see things about her, perhaps he didn't wish to upset her. Sarah leaned back and sighed, just a little.
There was no way for her to tell.
no subject
Unless he was sleeping. Then all bets were off.
no subject
She shrugged at him, not quite sure how to reassure him that she was, in fact, pleased, and reached to pat his arm before pointing at the history book. He should study and he still had her binder.
no subject
If it was anything but history, he could probably help her out with that, too.
no subject
She made a bit of a face at it because, really, it wasn't her favourite subject. The most interesting thing she found about it was the fact that her green tab reminded her of money and while money wasn't precisely what economics were about, she hadn't known that back in grade nine, when the subject that first been introduced. Then, she had thought it was just about money. Now she knew better but the correlation between her tab and her subject still amused her, in any case.
With a sigh she set the book on her lap and flipped in open. She supposed she'd work on it. Even if it was dull.