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A look on her face. Oona was poised to feel sheepish or ashamed, briefly worried it had been an embarrassing look, but the feeling slipped away as soon as it crept in on her. He was inspired. That couldnât be a bad thing. âSpur-of-the-moment curiosity,â she confirmed and picked up the chain of flowers she had started before he approached. âI like those. Iâve been meaning to follow them a little more often myself.â And he was right, none of the boys she grew up with learned a lot of stuff she had. While she had been busy braiding dandelions behind the church, her brother and his friends busied themselves with kicking around a soccer ball. So many things in life had been carefully categorized and purposefully separated. Lately, she wasnât so sure why. She liked that Sebastian sat down with her despite that pattern.
His next piece of information made her smile. âSee, thatâs a useful skill. This is why boys should learn traditionally girl stuff more often. I bet you havenât been button-less a single day since.â She looped her freshly cut daisy in with the others, warm at the memory his question brought up. âMy friendâs older sister taught me when I was in grade school. We were all waiting for our parents and, you know, your best friendâs older sister is a goddess to you, so you see her doing something and you basically fall over yourself to do it too.â She shrugged. Oona only had a little brother; she was fiercely jealous of people who had sisters. âNow itâs just something I do. Sitting around, wild flowers nearby, Iâm a little bored. I donât know. Bored habits stick with you.â She glanced over at him. âDo you have any of those?â She cut another daisy, then scooched a bit closer to show Sebastian what to do next. âAnd are you ready for the next big step? The infamous looping. Itâs scared off many a brave flower chain maker, so be warned,â she joked.
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âYeah,â he confirmed. He supposed he could have just said that to answer her question but he hated when people misunderstood him. It happened a lot, it seemed, whether it was people misinterpreting his words, mistaking his intentions or making mislead assumptions about his general demeanour, he often felt like what he meant and what he felt was entirely disconnected from what people thought of him. It sucked.Â
He nodded his head in agreement, âI had a dinner thing for something at school and my Mom was away- and my Dad- so, my parents are separated, my Dad lives like an hour away- um, anyway- I wanted to wear this specific shirt and when I was getting ready for this dinner, I busted the cuff and yeah, so I had to learn how to fix it pretty quick,â perhaps another boy could have simply picked another shirt to wear but not Sebastian. Had had chosen to wear that specific shirt well before the evening arrived and so that was the shirt he was going to wear.Â
âHm? Um,â he thought about it for a moment, brows furrowed as he considered her question, hoping to give a decent answer or at least one that didnât bore her to death. âI write stuff sometimes,â was that interesting or just embarrassing? âWhen Iâm bored or thinking a lot,â often those two things came hand in hand. He straightened his spine slightly, trying not to make it obvious that he was checking Oona out when she moved closer to him. âIf you think Iâm ready for the next big step, Iâm ready,â he offered with a smile. She was the expert and with nobody around to judge or make fun of him for it, he was prepared to treat her as such.










