Title: Rebirth Author: Misanoe (misanoe@yahoo.com) Rating: G Spoilers: None Pairing: T/P Friendship Summary: Something in Paris' live changes her, and Tristan is curious. Disclaimer: Not Mine Rebirth by Misanoe When I was a child I loved the water. I remember sitting in my bathtub after it was full and shutting of the tap just barely so there would be a continuos stream of dripping water throughout my bath. It fascinated me. I could sit there for hours, dipping my hands in the water and watching each drop of water trickle down my arms. Sometimes I would lie there and float to the top of the water; I was flying, soaring in the air. There was something about water, so cleansing, so pure. I had just finished seventh grade my parents took me to our beach house during the summer. I was ecstatic. There would be the ocean to swim in every day, what more could I ask for? At night I asked my mother if I could go swimming, it was all right with her. I don't think she was even really paying attention to me. She was getting ready to go to a dinner party one of her high society friends was holding. For a moment I watched her, transfixed at the glittering jewels that were dripping from her throat as she picked up the brush to retouch her hair. "Yes, Paris. You may go." She said distractedly as she shooed me out of her room. "Are you sure?" "Yes, yes, just go." I walked outside and watched dark water move loudly under the pale moon. The sand felt soft underneath my feet. Flinging my towel in the air I joyfully ran to the water and dove into a giant wave that crashed into the sand. I swam farther and farther out, there was something about swimming at night all alone that appealed to me. The joy I felt when in the water was like a secret, something for me to keep and hide for myself. All alone. I had never been comfortable in the presence of others. I did best by myself. I always do. The waves grew stronger and stronger as the night grew darker but I wasn't afraid. I was an excellent swimmer and the water had always been my friend. I didn't expect the waves to grow so strong as to drag me down and choke me, but it did. I began to struggle, the salty water burning my throat as I opened my mouth to scream. I was flailing in the water and the ocean was tossing me about like a rag doll. There was nothing I could do, no one to save me. I nearly drowned that night. Somehow I managed to make it back to land. I was hacking up water and my eyes were burning as I crawled higher on to the sand to get away from the waves. I heard the sound of an engine and managed to raise my head up enough to see my mom's Mercedes pulling out of the driveway. Looking back down I let my body lie limply on the sand. After an hour or so of lying there in the same position, I got on my knees to push my body up and dragged myself to the house. The lights inside were dark and the door was locked. I didn't have a key. I almost laughed then, but instead tears made there ways up in my eyes. I curled up next to the door and cried myself to sleep. In the morning when the maid came, she silently unlocked the door and prodded me with her hand. Getting up I followed and walked upstairs to my room. I laid down in my bed in the fetal position and promised myself I wouldn't cry anymore. That was the day I started to hate my mother, my father. I began to take showers and stayed away from swimming pools, beaches, lakes, whatever. Any large body of water I wouldn't go near. I hated water, like I hated my life. It was the second week of eighth grade when Tristan kissed me. It was a dare I later learned, but it didn't matter to me. I had never really viewed Tristan as anything but a fellow student that might have had parents just as dysfunctional as mine. He was a person I took for granted, that I saw every year in the same class for most of my life. The day he kissed me was the day that all my love for the water was transferred onto him. I clung to him desperately. To live a child needs something to love, so I loved Tristan. The only person who went through any motions of caring for me. In the mean time I continued to hate both parents. Or maybe I didn't really hate them. Maybe I just loved them, and resented them for not returning the sentiment. Before I craved warmth and got it from the water, now I craved love from Tristan and well, that didn't work out. I know people thought I was cold and frigid. Even my parents. But I wasn't. I was in an environment that didn't allow me to be warm and loving. The only thing caring ever got me was disappointment and heart break. When I cared, every time I scraped my knee or had something I was proud to show to my parents I was disappointed, because they were never there. After that night I spent asleep next to my door, I became disillusioned. I guarded my heart with my soul because I knew one more heartbreak just might kill me. I wasn't cold. I was frightened. Tristan was a solution. A certainty. He would always be there, like he had always been. It was okay to love him, even if he didn't return the affection. His presence was the one thing that had never let me down. That I had come to count on. As the years went by it didn't matter that Tristan grew to hold me in disdain, or that he got with half the sophomore class of Chilton. I knew that he didn't care about any of them. He was like me, holding everyone from a shoulder's length, afraid to let anyone get to close. I wasn't the only disillusioned one. I wasn't the only cold one. He might have had a facade of a friendly face or smile but he was just as closed off from other people as I was. He didn't mix emotions with his relationships with people. That was another thing I had to count on, and he had never let me down until Rory. I didn't blame him. Who could. In a throng of snobby, superficial, disillusioned children she stood out like a beacon of light. She was the one that was loved. That had a glow and smile that said to the world, "Look at me. Someone loves me." She was happy, really god honest happy. To someone like Tristan and me, who had been closed off from all affection, she was so good to look at. It almost hurt the eyes to see how happy another person my age could be. I didn't hate her because Tristan was drawn to her. How could I when even I was drawn to her. I hated her because she was loved. Because she had everything that I didn't have. Because she was the antithesis for all I stood for. For everything I didn't want to stand for. Because I wanted to be her, and I wasn't. So I continued my life, angry, bitter. I had money. That was something Rory didn't have. I had lots and lots of money. My parents bought everything I could possibly want. But make no mistake, everything was paid for tenfold by me. In the value of true worth, the things they bought me was a drop in a bucket. What I gave them because of the debt I felt towards them was worth so much more. I was a model daughter. I didn't drink, swear, slouch, shout, talk back, or anything else kids my age do. I wore what my mother wanted me to wear, I ate what she wanted me to eat, I tied my hair back neatly the way I should. I was a proper young lady. A smart lady. I would go to Chilton because it was the best, and I was to be the best. And I was. But let me tell you something about being at the top. It's lonely. I'm alone looking down at everyone I am better then. And I wanted someone else to be the best, so I could step down and join the rest of humanity. But I couldn't. Because I owed them, and they made sure to remind me every chance I could get. Every step I took in Chilton was because of their money, their influence. Nothing was given, only tallied up in their minds to be used against me later on. So I never asked them for anything. Nothing was for free, and I barely had anything left to give them. I wonder if they had conversations with each other. "How much for Paris's soul do you think? The tuition to Harvard?" "Yeah, I think that would do it." And it probably would. No liberation, no freedom. No one to pull me out of the deep end. No one but myself. I had done it once, I didn't know if I had the strength to do it again. ***** I listened to the radio this morning. There is a 90 percent chance of rain later on in the day. I decided to walk to school. ***** "...the Prince then leaned down and kissed the princess, who awoke from her 100 years of slumber." Tristan kissed me. I don't know if he meant to or if he was dared again or what. Once again, I didn't care. So far I've had two epiphanies in my life. The first was when I almost drowned; the second, when Tristan kissed me for the second time. When he kissed me I felt nothing. I felt devoid of all emotions. It was then I realized that Tristan was not my redemption or key into the world. He was something I imagined. After several seconds I was the one that pulled back. And calmly I collected my things and walked out of the room. Later that day, in my empty house, I went to the bathroom with the biggest bathtub and drew a bath. I had a major paper due the next day, and had been too swamped the past week to complete it. Instead of doing my work though, I climbed into the enormous tub with the faucet barely off and let the water trickle on my hands. It was the first time I was fully immersed in water since that day I lost myself in the ocean. It was like greeting an old friend. All the anger and resentment I had melted away as the water gently lapped against my side. I laid there for hours, ignoring the way my skin was shriveling up in the water, and the time that steadily ticked by. ***** "All right, if everyone would please hand in their papers, we can get started with our next assignment." The professor instructed, walking around as he collected a paper from each student. Everyone looked up when the door opened, all wondering who it was that dared to defile the sacred Chilton laws by arriving late. The only person it could be was me, and I was already here. It was Paris and I began to gawk. Her being late is enough out of the ordinary but her hair was loose and slightly awry, and she wasn't wearing her confining stiff jacket. "Miss Geller. I was wondering where you were." Staring straight at the teacher she shrugged her shoulders. "I hope you were able to articulate yourself clearer in your paper Miss Geller." The professor dryly responded as he held out his hand expectantly. "I don't have it." Everyone looked up at her in astonishment. My eyes just grew bigger. Paris has never, ever missed an assignment. Ever. Period. I've known her since kindergarten and even then she always turned in every single picture or math sheet. "And where is it?" The professor asked, his eyebrow lifted in disbelief. "I didn't finish it." This was getting stranger and stranger and I began to wonder who it was that stood up there and what she had done with the real Paris. "Why didn't you finish it Miss Geller?" Asked an equally astonished Professor, who was probably wondering if her parents had both died and she had been in a coma, unable to do her work. I know I was. "I was taking a bath." She responded in a deadtone. Those of us who weren't shocked began to snicker as Paris walked past the gaping professor and took her seat. Paris had no sense of humor. I was sure of that. So she was either joking or being dead serious. From the look of her face she was extremely serious. But to have been taking a bath instead of doing her paper sounded equally implausible. The teacher recovered and continued on with the class, trying to capture the attention of the class but I was a lost cause. For the rest of my school day I found myself staring at Paris. She seemed different. Less uptight, but still closed off from the rest of the world. She reminded me of the child she had once been. Just a less happier version. Looking back at the professor my mind began to drift back to earlier times. To our childhood. It was our childhood because they were intertwined. There was no use denying that. I had grown up with her constantly around. Not annoying as of eighth grade. Just there. I went to her birthday parties, she came to mine. Every year she would be in the same class as me. The one familiar face I would find every time I scanned the room in the beginning of the year. I began to search for that face in fourth grade. Just to make sure. She was happier then. She smiled more. Then in eighth grade she came back changed. Sullen. Angry and bossy. I was a kid and I didn't know what happened. I still don't. So one day I had went up to her and kissed her. It was a dare I told everyone later on. And it was, but it was something I could have easily gotten out of if I really didn't want to do it. I'm not sure why I did it. I think I just wanted her to go back to the way she was. To erase the dead look in her eyes and give it back the life that had once resided there. It didn't work. Instead of her going back to the way she was, she began to cling to me. And it scared me. So I began to push her buttons. To see what she would let me get away with. I copied from her, got her to do some assignments, whatever. I tried to push her so she would push me back, but she never did. She put up with everything, so I quit. I stopped asking for things because I knew she would willingly part with them, and that wasn't what I really wanted. Gradually I forgot what it was I wanted, and just held the crush she had on me over her head with contempt. I didn't think she would like me for so long. Yesterday I kissed her. I was bored and it was a means of entertainment. I wanted to play with her head, so I kissed her in an empty classroom while we were reviewing our notes. I thought it would be something I could laugh at later on. But I didn't get any response from her. She just left without saying anything, and me utterly confused. She hasn't looked at me adoringly once today. It wasn't because she was avoiding me because she was embarrassed or anything. I could tell. She knew I was staring at her. She even turned to around to stare straight back at me for a minute before she turned back around to continue her work. She just doesn't seem to care. When I look at her, I catch glimpses of the girl I once knew. And I realize that something changed for her. Like something changed for her before she came back to eighth grade. She's not the same anymore, and it seems like this Paris is going to get along fine without Tristan. And I really don't know how to feel about that. ***** It's raining outside now and I feel a smile grow on my face. All day everyone had been given me curious looks or making snide comments when I walked into their hearing range. It didn't matter. Not that it ever did. The whole day was like some sort of dream, that I hadn't waken up from yet. And I couldn't wait to walk in the rain, to clear my mind. Grabbing my books and folders in my arm I take my first step outside of the school. The rain is pouring down heavily and students are scrambling around, trying to get to their cars without getting to wet. Slowly I began to make my way outside, ignoring the eyes that follow me as I continued to walk away from the parking lot. Chilton is in the middle of the woods. If someone were to walk to Chilton, it doesn't matter where they are coming from. They're going to have to go through the woods. So that's what I was doing. The leaves from the trees slowed down the rain drops, but I was still drenched within the time it took me to walk ten yards. I had been walking for thirty minutes in bliss, oblivious to the world around me when a car slowed down and stopped next to me. I would have continued without noticing if the window hadn't gone done and a person called my name instantly over and over. "Paris." I walked to the passenger's window. And stared blankly at Tristan. "Jesus Christ Paris, what are you doing?" I looked at him like he was retarded. What did it look like I was doing? "I'm walking home." I answered, stating the obvious. "You live three miles away." He said in disbelief. I shrugged my shoulders. "I'm one-third the way there." Leaning over he pulled on the lever that opened the passenger's door. I continued to stare at him blankly wondering what he was doing. "Paris get in the car." I stared at him bewildered. Why would I want to get in his car? "Paris, get in." I didn't know how to respond to that. So I looked at him, smiled so he knew I was all right and continued on my merry way. Slowly his car crept next to me and he called out my name again. He was like an insect I couldn't get rid of. "If you don't get in the car Paris I'm going to get out and carry you in." I stood there and waited to see if it was an empty threat. I swear I thought it was. Who would think that Tristan would get all wet for me? It turns out he would and as soon as I saw him open his door and step out I grinned. I don't know why I did it. Really I don't. But the next thing I did was fling my books at him and toss my backpack off, going off into a full sprint. What do you know he actually chased me. When I ran I felt like I was flying. The water continued to pour on me and I didn't even remember I was running away from someone until I my foot slipped on wet grass and I fell on my ass. Tristan had been right behind me, and was now hovering over me. "What's wrong with you Paris?" He nearly shouted as he looked down at me like I was insane. Funny, I was feeling much more sane then I've felt in the past three years. I looked at my three year former love interest thinking only of how unfair it was, that he could still look immaculate when he was drenched and standing in the rain. Discretely one of my hands closed on the mud around me and I stood up. Walking towards him I pulled that hand back and threw it at his chest. His jaw dropped and his eyes grew incredibly big. Looking at him I burst out in laughter. Wiping some of the hair in my face away, I ignored the mud I smudged on myself and ignored the fact that I probably looked even grungier then him and just laughed harder. His eyes narrowed, and without any warning he grabbed me around the waist and threw me over his shoulder. I was the one who was in shock now. "I told you I'd drag you to the car if I had to." He said. I knew him well. Very well. And I knew that there was a self satisfied smirk on his face as he continued to walk to his car, carrying me casually over his shoulder like a cave man. I couldn't verify that because I was facing his back, so I inwardly shrugged and used my muddy finger to draw a happy face on his back. I started laughing again to the indignation of Tristan, tears of mirth streaming down my face. When he reached his car he opened his passenger door wide open and flung me in. Childproofing the door so I couldn't open it, he walked to the other side and got in. The car smelled like the woods because of my wet clothes, I liked it. I looked down, I was getting his car dirty but Tristan didn't seem to notice the muddy clothes ruining his leather upholstery. Rich kids are like that. We don't care about our material possessions we destroy or dirty, we figure there's always someone else that will clean it up or replace it, and there is. The downside of that, we have no privacy. No chance to make anything ours. The moment the color from a shirt wears out or a pile of CD's lay awry on the floor, someone is there to put it back the way it should be. As if our daily routines in life are dirty and need to be cleaned up by someone else. "Is your mother home?" I looked up. "I don't know." There were many places she could have been. And although it was rare, she was known to be at the house I lived in on occasion. "Look, we'll go to my house and get you cleaned up. The maid will wash your clothes and when you get home, no one will have to know." I stared at him. He was busy concentrating on the road and the tension in him could be cut with a knife. Know what? I thought to myself. Know that her daughter just had one of the most liberating moments in her life. It's not like she would have cared. No wait, I was dirty and happy. She would have wanted to put a stop to that right away. I sighed. "Let's go." The rest of the car ride was silent. I don't think Tristan really knew what to say to me and I wasn't going to volunteer any conversation. I was tired of trying to start up conversations with him, only to be rebuffed. I looked outside the window and watched the trees thin. We would be at his house soon I thought as I saw a bunch of tall stern looking houses come into view. I remembered where he lived. I've been there every year for the obligatory birthday party. Although I never really complained. Not after seventh grade anyways. He pulled into his stone driveway and parked outside, not bothering to put his car in the garage. Opening his door and getting out, he walked to her side and opened the door for her. "Are you coming or do I have to carry you again?" Mustering all of my dignity, which as a mud covered girl I didn't have much of, I daintily stepped out of the car onto the pavement, ignoring the hand he offered to help me up with. "Let's go." Closing the car door shut he walked towards his house. Silently I followed him. He was right, I didn't want to go home and face my mother like this. She would somehow find a way to suck all the happiness out of this moment. So I followed, and watched him walk to the massive door and ring the doorbell. A maid opened the door and looked curiously at me, but silently stepped aside without a word to let Tristan and his friend inside. He walked across the floor in his muddy shoes, once again not bothering to take the time to take them off. He knew his feet marks would be gone before his parents came home tonight. Assuming his parents came home tonight. Opening a door we walked into a room that I assumed was his. It was nicely decorated. Kind of looked like my room. Tasteful wood furniture, decorator pillows in order on his decorator sheets. No personal touches. It definitely looked like my room. Any personal touches that he could have made would have been cleaned by the maid. That's how it was. Anything that clashed with the decor just disappeared. I watched Tristan quietly from the foot of his door as he walked towards a drawer and rummaged through his clothes. He grabbed the first shirt and shorts he touched and walked towards another door in his room, turning around to motion me to follow him. The door opened to reveal a bathroom. He tossed the clothes on a towel rack. "Here, wear these after you take a shower and leave your dirty clothes in the hamper. I'll tell the maid to wash them." I nodded. A shower sounded good right now. I stepped inside his bathroom and was about to close the door when I heard him silently call my name. I looked up to look at him and stood still as he studied my face. "What changed?" He asked, his face unreadable yet comforting just the same. I smiled. What changed? "Everything." He nodded and I shut the door. ***** I lay on my bed and listened to the comforting sounds of the shower and rain. I was at a loss of words for what happened today. Contrary to popular belief I am a good student. I have to be if I want to get anywhere in the future. I wasn't going to be some washed up spoiled brat that was surviving on his parents money when I was forty. I stayed after class to review an assignment that was due the next day. By the time I left the classroom the school was pretty empty. Most kids are in and out within ten minutes. The end of school is the end of school and everyone has places to go, people to meet, things to do. Driving home in the thick rain I saw a lone bedraggled figure on walking on the side of the road. Normally I wouldn't give a rats ass and even think of stopping, but this girl was wearing a Chilton uniform. Curiosity overcame me and I pulled over. Lo and behold there was Paris walking to god knows where. Earlier I might have left her there, sped off without giving a damn. But something about the way she walked made me want to drag her in the car and explain herself. Tell me what had happened to change her so much. I called her name and she stopped after I honked my horn. She was out of it, but she looked enlightened. Like a load had been lifted off of her. It didn't surprise me that she didn't want a ride. It wasn't as though she didn't have her own car to drive home in. There must have been a reason she was walking home. But I couldn't let her continue. I needed to know. I don't know when I was more surprised. When she threw all her books to the ground without a care and ran, or when she threw mud at me, or when she drew that happy face on my back. I felt it. I knew what it was, and I heard her snickering. I wasn't as mad as I should have been when I looked down to see the mud trailing down in big thick clumps down my uniform. Normally I would have been, but she started laughing and I was in to much awe to remember that I should be angry. I've know Paris for a long time, for as long as I could remember, but I have never ever seen her laugh like that before. I've seen her smile, a real smile, and I'm one of a few who can claim to have seen that elusive smile. But laugh, joyfully? It was incomprehensible. Gone was the bitter angry girl that had an annoying crush on me. In her place was someone that was- happy. Really happy. And that in itself was the most startling thing I have ever seen. She was drenched, dirty, mud on her face, and standing there in front of me laughing. Her clothes clung to her and her hair hung in loose strands in front of her face. I wanted her. I really wanted her, and not in a sexual way. Okay, not completely in a sexual way. I wanted to be with her. Similar to the way I felt about her when I was a child, but I wasn't sure if the feeling was mutual. If this Paris I fondly remembered from childhood felt anything for me. My thoughts were getting so uncharacteristically muddled I just threw her over my shoulder and dragged her to the car, trying not to look at her legs. I child locked her in the car. I didn't want her to get away, not until I found out everything I needed to know. I brought her to my house, not just because I wanted her to get cleaned up so she wouldn't get in trouble. I'm selfish. I brought her to my house because I wanted her there. Because I wanted to unravel the puzzle that was Paris. Because yesterday she would have done anything to gain my attention, and today she didn't seem even notice me. Because she was happy, and I didn't know why. Because she was happy, and I wasn't. What changed I asked her. Everything? What did that mean? I wanted to know. I needed to know. I was so immersed in my thoughts I didn't realize the shower had been turned off and Paris stood at the bathroom's door, lost in my T-shirt which was oversized on her and draped over her small frame. "My clothes are in the hamper." ***** He kept staring at me, and I didn't know how to make him stop. I stared back at him for a while, but after it seemed like he wasn't going to respond I looked down at the enormous shirt on me and began to finger the expensive material. It screamed imported and was perfectly pressed, perfectly clean. I didn't like it. I began to poke at it was my finger, trying to see how much the thin fabric could take before it would give in and rip. After several seconds it gave way and there was now a small hole in his shirt the size of my finger. I looked up and smiled, empowered by my small act of destruction. "I like it better this way." He didn't respond. He just kept staring. I didn't think he would care. Like I said, we're rich kids. He probably had a dozen shirts just like this one stashed in that drawer. His maid would probably vanquish this one as soon as it was spotted, and he wouldn't notice the difference, so what did it matter to him. I looked down at my hole again. The fabric around the hole was stretched and hung lower the other side. It was not flawed. Like me. I looked up at Tristan. Like him. "Wait here," Tristan stated. "I'll take your clothes to the maid." I nodded. "Sure, yeah." I watched as he walked out of the room with my soggy clothes. He was so quiet, I didn't know if he was mad at me, or just curious. Looking around I climbed on his bed and made myself comfortable. It was cold, sterile, pristine, just like home. Maybe our mother's had the same decorator. Probably. I tossed the pillows on the floor, breaking the formation and lifted his bedcovers. I was tired and wanted to sleep. So I was going to sleep. That settled I closed my eyes and tried to ignore the ticking from the mahogany clock. ***** I took Paris's dripping clothes and deposited on the counter next to the maid, telling her to bring it up in three hours. There was no rush. With that done I climbed the stairs again and walked in the hallways stopping when I reached my door. I didn't know what I was going to say when I walked inside that room. So I stood there, afraid to go inside of my own room. When I finally walked inside I looked around and realized she was lying in my bed. Under my covers. This was a strange new development. But I didn't think there was anything else she could do that would really startle me. Slowly I walked to her and carefully studied her face. She frowns when she sleeps. Her brow is furrowed in concentration and I wonder what it is that plagues her sleep and disturbs her so. She looked more like the Paris I've known for the past three years. Somehow, when I look at her face, I can't help but think she has a face that was structurally built for frowning. The house is quiet. It always is. I realize I'm still in my wet uniform so I began to strip and change into dry clothing. Throwing my clothes in a corner of my room I lift the covers to my bed and climb in next to Paris. I turn to my side so I can study her while she sleeps. A strand of wet hair clings to her cheek and carefully, without touching her skin I brush it out of her face. I lay there for the next few hours just staring at her while she breathes. Reminiscing about times past. Paris had never a been a pivotal figure in my life, but she had always been there. I had a crush on her in fourth grade. I even considered asking her to be my girlfriend, but felt slightly silly when I had tried to force the words out of my mouth. It was different then. She didn't like me. She didn't hate me, but I probably was no more then one boy in a group of over twenty. I used to harass her and pull her pony tail when she wasn't expecting it. One time I made her cry, but I always did it to get her attention. I always wanted her attention. By sixth grade I was over my puppy love. I viewed her as I would view a relative. Someone who's not quite your friend, but connected to you in some way. She came over for a project once. It was for the science fair and the teacher had allowed us to pick our own partners. She looked expectantly at her best friend to find her off with the new girl. I watched her face fall and in a selfless act that surprised myself, I marched to her desk and plopped down next to her, sardonically proclaiming her as my partner because she was a brain. She looked at me in surprise but graced me with a grateful smile. At my house, which she was pretty familiar with, she dutifully followed me to playroom and sat down next to me, rattling off what we should do for our project. Even then she was a control freak but like now I didn't mind. It meant there would be less for me to do. We had been at it for several hours when the yelling started. Not between me and her, but my parents. As soon as I heard the high pitched voice and the tinkle of glass breaking I froze. I looked down embarrassed. I didn't want her to see my life for what it really was. Sitting down close next to me she took her hand in mine and told me her house was the same. I looked at her and she smiled again. I smiled back. I may have played cruelly with Paris's feelings, but I never forgot that moment. And I never stopped caring about her. In a way I was hurt when she started looking at me with the same puppy eyes the other girls had started viewing me through in eighth grade. She was supposed to know what I was really like. Supposed to know where I came from. It would have been different if she had really liked me, liked me because we were friends and she knew me. But it wasn't like that. I kissed her once because I cared and I wanted her to become the Paris I knew and suddenly she was staring at me like I was a god. An idol, someone other then me. In my world full of superficial people, she had been the grounding life line, and with that fake crush she had on me she turned into one of them. That made me lash out on her, and I've use the offending feelings she had for me against her. If she had been a real friend she wouldn't have done my work when I asked her to. She would have told me she was busy and to get my sorry ass in gear and do it myself. It became a game, the less I paid attention to her, the more she paid to me. The meaner I was to her, the nicer she was to me. After several years I forgot why I was playing and just went with the motions that I was so familiar with. I averted my attention back to her. Something told me that Paris would no longer put up with my bull shit. That if I pushed her she would push me right back. The less attention I gave her, the less she would care. This was disturbing me because I wanted her to care. Not as some mindless groupie, but as I always wanted her to. As Paris. The one that knew me. ***** I laid there pretending to be asleep. You see, I could feel Tristan's eyes on me. He was staring at me again and I didn't want to open my eyes yet. I didn't feel like explaining myself. I was tired of having to explain everything I did. Couldn't I be allowed to do the unexpected without getting treated like I did something wrong? "I know your awake." Crap I thought to myself as I slowly opened my eyes, to find myself staring directly at Tristan. "How did you know?" "Your breathing changed." "Oh." Tristan kept his eyes on mine, without giving me a hint of emotion. It was slightly unnerving, to be in the same bed with a person who had his face less then a foot away from yours; that refused to stop staring. My mother would call that rude behavior. You were never supposed to stare at anyone for prolonged periods of time. It was supposed to make them feel uncomfortable. She was right. But that nagging voice I heard in my head just strengthened my resolve to stare right back at him. So we lay there. And the time went by, the clock kept ticking. "It's rude to stare at people." I informed him. There was nothing else I could think of to say and the silence with suffocating me. He didn't reply and kept staring. I guess he didn't know that rule. "I tossed your pillows on the floor?" I offered, trying to evoke something out of his blank face. I was rewarded with a grin. Not the seducter grin he used on most girls, but an amused grin, which conveyed the feeling of amusement. I haven't received a grin like that from him for a while. The most I usually got was a smirk that said, "You like me, and I know it." I think we both knew I wouldn't be getting that smirk anymore. In a most unexpected move Tristan scooted closer and used his arm to pull me close to him and give me a hug. It was an asexual move. Sometimes everyone needs a hug that has nothing to do with sex. I was sure physical contact of a non-sexual kind was lacking in Tristan's life so I hugged him back. This was about comfort. About a shared history. About finding each other once again. There were things we had done to each other in the past that had been cruel. Almost unforgivable, but in that hug we let go of the past. There was no need to apologize. None of it mattered anymore. Once again we were two sad children that needed someone to hold. It was the end and the beginning of an old and new friendship. That night changed things. Everything was different, and nothing would go back to what it had once been. ***** End