Insomnia was a new companion to her, and had not proven to be very helpful before that Saturday night. It spurred her from bed, where she mostly lied stock still wishing for a cigarette despite her latest attempts to cut back, where she would slip beyond the towers, through hallways, past kitchens. A few detentions had come of it, but she'd rather risk the detention than remain trapped in a room where the rise and fall of her dormmates seemed to creep into her own chest and fill her with breath that wasn't hers, removing her from the equation entirely, sending her spiraling towards a nonexistence she had always craved but now, so close, shied from-
She needed sleep.
She had considered talking to Apollo. She knew he had late hours granted to him by none other than the Minister of Magic himself and she could always break curfew to ensure a private request for a potion that would bring her the respite she needed. But despite their quiet camaraderie, it wasn't a part of life she was willing to share with him, with anyone. She had tried openness, and it turned out that some thoughts were best left to stew deep inside. They didn't wither against the light of day, they drew the light into the darkness.
She missed him.
Not Apollo.
When I was seventeen
My mother said to me
"Don't stop imagining. The day that you do is the day that you die."
“Care for some company?”
Her eyes slid open and those dark eyes were staring at her. Eyes she had met in the car, that were so warm she felt her own icy gaze swim as ice bent to heat but that stupid. It was just cold out.
She shrugged and wished she had a cigarette to lift to her lips, to occupy the space between them so her tongue and teeth could continue their rest, could stay unmoved and words remain unformed. But she had left the cigarettes back in the tent. Because she had wanted to see the moon, and not through a screen of smoke.
He settled next to her and it was only now that his body radiated warmth towards her did her skin dance as a reminder that she had been cold. She wondered if he had not joined her if she would not have noticed, if she could have slowly turned to ice and not known because there was no point of reference. She would have accepted each degree of frostbite as the new normal, as what it meant to be alive in that moment, until she tried to get up and realized she was frozen to the dock, and her life as anything beyond a flannel-covered popsicle was over.
“It’s beautiful.”
She nodded, because he was right. The moon was full and the lake was mostly still. The buzzing of insects and the hooting of owls and the rustle of leaves – it was all real and tangible and also not happening to anyone else in the world. It was alive but unverified but by her – and now by him.
She supposed this is what Ace had wanted them to see, for this to be the peak of their fun. For this view to be their high, not the vodka and the weed. Molly rolled her lips inward.
“Ace is mad.”
Casper nodded, shifting his leg so he could rest his chin on his knee. “Yeah.”
“She’s mad and I didn’t tell Margo no anyway.”
Casper shrugged. “Just because someone feels something bad doesn’t mean you have to take it away.”
She wanted a cigarette. She wanted to lift it to her lips and lay back and rest her back against the slats of the dock and just look up at the sky and wait until it was too cold and then bid him goodnight. Ace would be deep in sleep and Molly would try to mask the smell of cigarette because it made the blonde’s nose wrinkle in the least subtle way, and she would wake the next morning to see Ace doling out rations of rabbit jerky or whatever ridiculous survival food she thought best for breakfast.
But she looked down at her feet, skating above the water. She turned them in alternating patterns and tried to deflect the questions coming to her head. But if you could spare someone pain, shouldn’t you? If people can’t see what’s best for them but you can, shouldn’t you show them? What’s the point of good feelings if not to try to take over the bad? How else do we take care of each other? Just let each other be miserable?
“I think she would have found something to be mad about,” Casper said, and the lightness in his tone didn’t detract at all from the truth of the statement, only painted a picture in which this wasn’t necessarily a flaw of the Longbottom girl. “She doesn’t seem like the personality you’d expect here.”
Molly’s lips twitched. “If her friend had been here, she’d be happier.”
“I thought you were her friend.”
Molly glanced his way. Nothing probing, just honesty. Wasn’t all that honesty uncomfortable, heavy, cumbersome? She parted her lips, and found for once that she wasn’t deciding not to say an answer she absolutely knew, but struggling to articulate something she didn’t know. So she shrugged, looking forward and focusing on the sheen around the moon.
“If it helps… you seem to care.”
She rolled her lips inward, and her heart quickened at the realization that the cold air was stinging her eyes.
Because it certainly did seem that way didn’t it.
Now I pull a wanton carriage
Instead of the horses, grazing the lawn
The next morning was much like Molly suspected, with Ace rousing them all early to eat some jerky she had brought along, stating that they should get going if they wanted to do the hike she had mapped out. Margo and Kathryn were deep in talk, seemingly of the assumption that Ace was once again alone in this idea, but Molly tied her jacket around her waist and grabbed a canteen.
“This way?”
Ace blinked and nodded, picking up a tall walking stick she had probably spent too long finding, and headed out. Molly’s eyes met Casper’s as they took off after her and he grinned at her, and she found herself smiling back.
I was having fun.
Even with Kathryn and Margo making jokes, even with the absolutely uncrossable part of the river, even when Margo slipped down a rock face and made a huge stink until they all couldn’t stop laughing. The view Ace led them too was lush and green and Molly could practically imagine the spot in thousands of years when no trace of her or Ace or Margo or the Jericho’s existed. It would still be there, just as it always had.
And Ace had a certain spring in her step as they returned to camp, and Casper was giving her a smile that made her feel like that good friend she seemed to be.
We were all having fun
“Ace.”
Ace Longbottom shouldn’t look like this. But she did. Molly could see her trail and, even in her shock, couldn't help but find herself unsurprised that Ace still had started in the right direction to the hospital wing. But the fact that anyone had bested her, that blood seeped from an unforgiving wound on her arm, that she was alone -
"Help."
It came out as a croak that only proved fruitful as she lifted Ace and hurried towards the hospital wing, shouting louder, an unused voice rising to the occasion. And it wasn't until the only professor who could have been in the dungeons heard the call, Professor Potter herself, investigated that they managed to burst into the hospital wing, an unconscious and bleeding Ace Longbottom held limply between them.