It could have been a late awakening. People talk about awakenings that happened once the inevitable phenomenon of puberty begins to work its mysteries through a body. Some talked about it as if the process would be a kind of enlightenment, where you grow up to become who you were meant to be -- a man, a woman ... but Trent felt none of it. Besides, there was nothing special about being a man, not that he qualified to be one, at just the age of Fifteen. He merely had an operating reproductive system, and that was it; and a very young one at that, albeit the many trips of pleasures it had already taken with muggle girls who did not matter. So there was nothing special about being a man, in Trent's opinion. After all, that made you part of the collective of Man, of men. What could possibly be enlightening about being a part of a collective, of being nothing but a collective, not even possessing an identification that is personal? It was easy, for Trent, to face the part of puberty where the body experienced a kind of pleasure that even the ultimate joy of constructing a Lego car and operating it through a battery-remote could not compete. What was difficult, and Trent only found out as of late, was how to deal with the heart's puberty, when the heart decided it was ready to be ruptured by who it believed to be the most rupture-worthy girl of all time.
Trent's heart had ruptured, and his mind could not comprehend it, as if the two were recently divorced. Before, his desires and the thoughts about it aligned. Now, he was left perpetually gazing at the subject of his desire, even when she was not around, and wondering how he thought about the whole thing. Trent gazed at Millie, smiling a little in response to her, watching her talk, and feeling amused although he really was used to what was usually up to. If it were all just platonic, he would have shrugged at her response complacently. But it wasn't. He looked at her as if he thought she was the cutest thing on earth. As much as being the cutest thing might not sound flattering, it was. Trent barely stared at people or things in the manner that he was gazing at Millie. And then Millie continued to talk, speaking of something Trent actually had to comment on.
"It's Sarah, isn't it? I've been guessing, but he's so bloody obvious with it, I don't think it's called guessing anymore. Doesn't Sarah have a ... guy, or something?" Trent shrugged. It did not really matter, but sometimes gossip filled conversations. Trent merely eyed the book, before returning his eyes to the girl. He was not much of a reader. If only classes involved merely talking rather than having to read. Reading made him sleep. Trent nodded. "Not much going on at the Slytherin front, yes. None that I've heard of recently. I was hoping you, or Roxi, were up to something. I guess we've all been neglecting the Slytherins. Poor things. I bet they're wondering, craving even, our love and our attention. You should probably give it to them. Poor children." He clucked his tongue, before he grinned at Millie.
Trent thought that he had effectively steered conversation away from being awkward, at least broaching a common subject between the both of them. But Millie ruptured it, not that he would complain against that. It was a much needed question. The longer it took for them to solve this big question, the longer it might have to be for him to not see Millie as often as he would like, which probably meant everyday, seeing as to how he did see her around still, in passing -- in classes, in the Great Hall, and of course, in the Common Room. What more did he want? Millie in his bed again? Her smell, above the smell of his cigarette and spliffs? That was probably one of it. Trent tried to stifle a laugh when Millie mentioned those words that he thought too, but did not have the courage to spill, only because she blushed and proceeded to hide herself not very effectively behind her book. But of course, the stifling that Trent attempted failed. He laughed. Out loud. And then he bit his lower lip to stop it.
"Haven't you been doing that?" He asked now, cautiously. Part of him tried to make it sound like teasing, while the other part was really testing. Trent wanted to see if she had gone around, without him, willing that she did not, of course. It was a jealous part acting up inside of him. "I mean, I've been having at it ..." He paused, and grinned. "... with my homework." Trent chuckled at the lame joke he just cracked. "They're not very comfortable ..." And then he realised how that might have came out, him doing his homework, indecently. "Not that I've been trysting my homework ..." No, that would be lame, and geeky. "I've just been ... trying to look like I'm even doing it, for the first time." And then he said, wistfully. "Perhaps I wouldn't fail the OWLs, after all." And then Trent remembered the question at hand. He scratched the back of his neck, not that it needed some scratching. He just wanted to stall for time.
"I ... don't know." He shrugged. "We're friends, aren't we? I mean, we are, always will be. It'd be weird if we .. are not." He frowned in confusion. And then, as if it would help, "you're a great friend ... ?" Trent did not know if he dared to want Millie as more. "I ... well, Elliot would murder me if I did anything wrong. I'm not sure ..." He paused. "... I always make mistakes. I'm not sure if I'll do anything wrong, with you." Trent tucked both of his hands in his pockets. "If I do something wrong, I'll feel bad about it, of course. But I might not even get to live in regret, you know. Elliot will want me dead. He could kill me, and I'd appreciate it, speed up the process of living, you know." How did that come out? "I just don't want to live forever knowing how I was such a let down to too many people, and to people who mattered. My parents are foreshadows ..." But he could not resist Millie physically either. How could he live as a friend, when his mind would torture him with possibilities with her? After all, he needed that bodily pleasure too. That was the joy of holidays away from Hogwarts. Now, though, he really just wanted to be able to even caress the sides of Millie's face. Even that, perhaps, was weird as friends. Friends could hug, but he was sure being that would not let him enjoy the taste of Millie's tongue. Trent wanted to stop thinking, stop talking, and do so. He eyed her, as if he wanted to lunge forward for it. But he bit his lower lip, and contemplated.
"Can I ... kiss you?" And there it was, he could not hold that back. At least, he thought, he was asking ... not that asking made a difference to what the both of them were to each other.