Katpride
Story Collector
Lark’s responding smile is just a shade too soft. I wouldn’t mind you monopolizing my time, they carefully do not say, hiding their mouth behind their hand and glancing away.
The facade cracks almost immediately when they laugh at her joke, a genuinely delighted smile breaking its way onto their face. Their gaze flickers back to her, eyes crinkled with amusement. “Ha, yeah, no, that’s a good point. Hard to come by, those pesky rights.”
It’s easier, of course, to pass themself off as someone from the lower classes when visiting the past - less work on their part, too, since upper class outfits require so many little hand-sewn details that they decidedly do not have the patience for most days - but it does come with the unfortunate side effect of having to exist as, well, a nonexistent nobleperson’s servant, most of the time. Which isn't something they’d put Lily through, at least not without fair warning.
They snap out of their thoughts with a blink as some part of their brain registers movement. They twitch, suddenly alert again, but it’s only Lily. They watch her cross to the kitchen, face blank for a few moments as they wait for the instinctive wariness to pass. When they finally do answer, their voice is light, and they’re smiling once more. “Oh, yeah, I’ve got at least one Lark in London. I’ve visited all the major cities, so I can use the version of myself that visited as an anchor. It gets a bit tricky if you consider the different time periods I visited during, but generally I can just jump to where I want to go, locationally, and then do another hop up or down the timestream to where I want to be, temporally.”
That might be the first time Lark has explained that in as many words. They aren’t sure it entirely made sense, but rather than trying to explain further they shrug and pick up the glass of water they’ve been offered, taking a sip. They can hear Lily rustling about in the kitchen behind them, and after a moment of wrestling with their dumb twitchy hindbrain they turn, propping an arm on the back of the couch so that they can keep an eye on her.
Survival instincts are hard to shake. They watch her move about the kitchen, relaxing by degrees as more seconds slip away without anything breaking the peaceful atmosphere. It may not be as familiar as their own, but something about Lily’s apartment seems… safe. They keep dropping their guard without meaning to.
Is that really such a bad thing? They push the thought aside, unfolding from the couch and wandering over to the kitchen table so that they can peer over Lily’s shoulder at the ingredients she’s pulling out.
“You don’t have to make me anything,” they say after a moment. There’s something in their voice that they can’t quite pin down. They hope it’s faint enough that Lily doesn’t notice, whatever it is.
They’re torn, though. Part of them wants to accept the offer, if only out of a burning curiosity to see how well Lily can cook, but the other part… Hmm, well, they could probably have a little bit. It isn’t like they can’t eat anything while they’re temporally displaced; it’s just smarter to keep to smaller snacks so they aren’t stuck in slow metabolism hell.
They aren’t quite sure how to express that to Lily, so what they end up saying is, “But if you insist, I think I’d land somewhere around a one-toast on that very comprehensive scale.”
Their fingers tap against the table, and they look at the stove as though it’s a wild animal that might jump up and bite them at any moment, but they still find themself asking, “Is there anything I can help with?”