Slightly Disheveled Radiator
Gender: None specified
Location: In a box on a hill towards the west banks of an unknown river.
Rank: Medium-in-training
Joined: Sun Mar 04, 2007 6:27 pm
Posts: 571
Part two, a few years later. It's a bit of a stretch and hopefully not TOO much OOC. What happened to Phoenix happened to a friend of mine and I feel like Nick's probably the sort of person who'd easily find himself in the same circumstance.
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“Hey Phoenix.”
The kid wore a collared polo and navy jeans, the bulge of his cell phone in his pocket. His target rolled his eyes at him and crossed his legs under the table, his pen scrawling at a sheet of notebook paper.
The kid snorted and threw a packet of paper at the boy before shouting louder. “Hey! Phoenix!”
Phoenix finally looked up and dropped his pen. The other boy was an eighth grader, a year older than him, but it had been a while since Nick had felt any real fear of him.
“Shut up.” He whispered back, glaring as fiercely as his gentle eyes let him. “They’re rehearsing.” The dimmed lights just barely illuminated a paper sign scotch-taped onto the cinder blocks –
Everything you say backstage can be heard from the audience. The older boy glanced at the sign for a half-second following Phoenix’s gesture towards it before promptly dismissing the warning. “Phoenix!”
Phoenix picked up his cheap pen again and resumed writing into the spiral-bound notebook.
Miles, do you remember those boys in our grade who always drove us crazy? “Phoenix, who are you going out with?” The boy pulled out his phone and flipped it open, getting ready to punch the verbal answer he hoped for into a text message.
He represented the two things that made middle school kids popular these days. Expensive phones and girlfriends, two things that Nick lacked.
Yeah, well, they haven’t changed very much. “No one.” He murmured, keeping his voice down. Beyond the curtain besides him, he could hear the plethora of aspiring pre-teen actors trying to remember their lines. He had tried out for the play on a whim, even though Larry had laughed at the idea of
Romeo and Juliet. Larry didn’t laugh when he found out that Phoenix-as-Tybalt got to have a swordfight on stage, even if it meant he died halfway through the show and had to spend the rest of rehearsal time with an annoying Mercutio behind the scenes.
His companion’s groan was audible. “Well, who do you like?”
Nick heard it all the time in the giggles and notes that ruled the halls of his school. Everyone liked someone, everyone who was anyone anyway.
“No one.” The younger boy finally retorted, pushing his wild hair out of his face and carefully scrawling out more cursive letters.
“Liar.” He wasn’t looking up, but he could hear the smirk all over his face from his words.
“There aren’t any girls I like.” Nick shrugged, honestly, as he wrote more. “I don’t really think about it.”
I don’t think you would like middle school much. Everyone here is far too stupid for you. Are the kids in Germany smart? He’d learned to not expect an answer to his letters, but although he knew he’d probably never know of the intelligence of German children, it had never stopped him from writing letters anyway. Miles had almost turned into a journal, and Nick couldn’t think of a single thing he had refrained from telling him. Even if Miles wasn’t reading, he still felt he had a duty to take the trip down to the mailbox nearly every few days.
The snort pervaded his ears. “You don’t like girls, Phoenix? Is that what you said?”
Nick didn’t bother to waste his time answering.
“If you don’t like girls, that means you’re
gay.”
It wasn’t the first time Phoenix had heard that. “Go away.” He responded flatly, deciding what he would write next.
I want to move to Germany with you. “Do you like boys, Phoenix? Are you gay?” His attacker had snapped his phone shut and pocketed it in his glee.
Is it hard to speak German? Maybe I’ll try learning it when the play is over so if I come to see you we can chat. “I think you’re gay.” Annoyed that his target was not responding, the older boy picked up his script and hit him with it.
Nick turned to retort, but he was cut off by yells from the stage. Rehearsal was over, and the cast of kids was dispersing through the curtains. The boy took his chance to escape and quickly thrust his notebook into his bag, exiting the building just as he heard his tormentor exclaim, “Guess what? Phoenix says he likes
boys!”
As he walked out into the parking lot, Nick thought of how he would finish his letter to Miles.
Whatever you do, don’t come back to the United States. Sometimes, I think you were the lucky one. “Someone asked me to marry them today.” Franziska declared as she invited himself into her “little brother’s” room, flouncing over to his bed. The boy was seated at his desk and poring over a heavy-bound book. He didn’t look up, but acknowledged her presence.
“Aren’t you a bit young for that?” The last time he checked, eight year olds couldn’t marry legally, at least not without a lot of consent and paperwork. Apparently it wasn’t the reaction she had wanted and she kicked him.
“Some foolish boy asked me today when I went on my walk.” She pouted, crossing her arms. “I kicked his ankle.” Miles had expected no less of her. He said nothing, waiting patiently for her to explain why she had bothered speaking to him. Usually any sort of words from her meant a less-than-encouraging pep talk.
“He was a moron. I didn’t even know him.” The little girl said snidely. “Besides, being in a social commitment would severely affect my work.”
Miles tried not to snort. He was used to her speaking as if she was decades older, but every once in a while she’d come out with something that would take him by surprise. “Understandable.”
“I wouldn’t expect you to understand, Miles Edgeworth. Papa says you would have grown up a hopeless romantic if he hadn’t intervened and taken you in. If you had gone anywhere but here after your Father died, you would never amount to anything.”
The boy nodded his head absentmindedly, scribbling some notes onto a piece of fine stationary as he paraphrased the law book. Although he was made to focus on precise detail, selective listening was a skill he had also acquired among the Von Karma family.
“But this is why I am here to tell you.” Her head was held high, as if she bore a crown, and she sniffed. “You’ve got to learn somehow, and seeing as you are my little brother…”
Her dress shoes hit the ground and she stood up. “Don’t ever get a girlfriend. She will only distract you.” She spoke as if she was the boy’s senior, and she certainly thought she was. “She’ll distract you from your studies and we all know how badly you need them…”
“Thank you, Franziska.” He replied only to placate her. Not that he ever planned on seeking companionship – not only because at age twelve it was a ridiculous idea, but also because under the verbiage the girl was right. Hopeless romantics who waxed poetic about another were hardly anything but fools, devoid of any sensible ambition. If he wanted to succeed beyond all others, a partnership wasn’t even an option. It was merely a fact of life.
She growled, stood up promptly, and before he could react she snatched away the large book, revealing the worn envelope hidden underneath. Before Franziska could seize it, however, Miles reached out and grabbed it, hiding it behind his back. It was unopened, and he had never intended to open it, but he still didn’t want her paws on it.
“You got
anotherone?” His young acquaintance growled. “That’s the fourth one this month!”
She didn’t jump after him or try to retrieve the letter, much to his surprise. Instead, she placed her small hands on her hips and scowled. “It’s from the same person, too. Fee-nicks. You said you didn’t know who that was.”
Miles looked down and shrugged. “Not anymore.” The letters were the only thing that kept him from forgetting his old life and he wasn’t appreciating it.
“You’re loyal to those…people. Loyal to a fault.” She barked as he stood up, heading for the trash can and holding the letter over her head. He shook his head as his trembling, elegant hands began to shred the envelope.
“One cannot be loyal to a fault, Franziska, if they realize that there is fault within being loyal.” The pieces of paper began to slowly drop into the bucket, glimpses of messy handwriting visible. “Which there is.”
He grabbed the book from her small hands and opened it back up, ignoring her as she stomped out of the room, frustrated with him. Without a single hesitation, he resumed writing in his neat, careful cursive.
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As one can assume, this is going to turn into P/E eventually and probably some Friskian too. Not saying that Nick acts EXPLICITLY gay from what happened, but a lot of middle schoolers do often assume that if one does not have a love interest they're obviously gay. I did want to cater to Nick's "shakespeare" side since I don't see that a lot. I also got the idea of Fran 's situation from a teensy little "perfect" girl who got proposed to yesterday when I was working at a church (gack) nursery with my mom. They were a bit younger but still, I could see Franziska whipping the crap out of nine year old suitors.
Don't eat it too badly D:
r&r please. <3
Married to Sakuro*And Eximplode07