Kiss me and I'll tell you
Written for the prompt from @flashfictionfridayofficial!
Lyra watched the one in front of her as he hesitated, leaning against him a little and peering around his shoulder, both of them huddling against the wall as a pair of guards passed by.
“Alright,” he said, watching them. “Across the path and we’ll be able to get into the buildings above the town.”
She nodded as he reached out and grabbed her hand, flashing her a smile. “Ready, high-born?”
She flattened her ears to the sides of her head and he just laughed, tugging at her hand. “Guards will round the corner in three…two…” He held up a single finger before darting out into the street, yanking her off her feet so hard she had to flit her wings to keep balance and keep up. His mop of ashen-grey hair bounced as he ran from one side to the other, dodging around other bodies and carts and animals with a deftness that told of his actions, spoke to his doing things like this a thousand times before.
In seconds they had gone from the light to the darkness, the sounds of conversation and market quickly giving way to the sounds of their feet on the carvened hardened steps that led up and up and up. They ran at a spiral that seemed to make almost no sense to her, but he navigated them easily as if he didn’t even need to see them.
By the time they emerged into light again, she had grown used to the dark and had to shield her eyes, blinking a number of times against the purplish light of the sky, the air-moon in full display and letting the higher light shine through itself. He continued leading her under archways and carved structures until they hit another set of stairs leading up and around, finally coming to the top of the structure. Finally coming to a stop.
Finally he let go of her hand.
Lyra blinked, eyes finally adjusted, and looked around.
They were higher than the other structures. Higher than the city below. Higher than the trees back home. She had only ever gotten this high on accident back home, her wings only strong enough to hold this height for moments before she was forced to go back down. The market and the others looked like miniature versions of themselves, milling around by willpower alone. The buildings looked like she could knock them over with her foot. She could see the paths as small partings between them, roads leading past the market and the walls surrounding it into the other parts of the fortress.
“This is amazing,” she said, the wind whipping at her hair and face and taking the words away from her. He reached up and motioned to her to sit down.
“The winds can be playful this high up,” he said loudly as she sat, and they leaned in closer to hear each other. “You have to be careful, high-born. Can’t have you falling and hurting your wings if you’re gonna help me get out of here!”
She curled her knees up to her chest as she stared. “It’s so high,” she told him. “You see this all the time?!”
“Every sun and moon change. Every change of the guard. Every moment I’m not doing something else.”
She stared at him for a moment, and when he caught the look he raised an eyebrow. “What is it?!”
“What do we do now?!” she asked. “The guards–”
“They don’t come up here,” he said, waving a hand. “We’ll wait until they think we’ve doubled back and head back inland. Then we’ll find that boat you’re told me about.”
“What do we do then!?” she asked. “Just wait?!”
“We could ask each other questions. Get to know each other.”
“What?!”
“Well all I really know about you is that your a high-born on your way to some betrothed that you don’t want to meet and you want to run off during one of the stops on your way so you don’t have to meet them. And I know that you are terrible and escaping guards that aren’t from your own territory,” he laughed.
“And I suppose all I know about you is that you’re aimoupon that is too good at escaping guards and that you want to escape a world where you can look out at this every single day and no one tells you to get down. What else is there to know about each other except what we need from the other?”
He grinned and let out a laugh. “An insult? Seems there’s plenty to learn about you, high-born. We can ask each other plenty of questions to make sure we’re not teaming up with someone that’s going to try and cook the other later or something.”
She rolled her eyes. “For example?”
He thought for a moment. “Well, I suppose…Things like…Where did a high-born learn such a low-born insult from? Why do you want to escape what the others seem to chase? Can I kiss you?”
Her face went red, first with anger as the answer to his first question leapt to her lips, but the last one changed the shade and her ears went forward. “W-What?!”
He grinned again.
“No, we can’t kiss, you useless–!!”
He shrugged and cut her off. “A kiss can tell you a lot about someone.”
She went even more red, her ears falling to either side of her head as her cheeks seemed to heat up. Maybe it was the air up here, making her sweat. Or the exertion of running from the guards. Surely that was it.
Yet that couldn’t explain why she asked, “like what?!”
He grinned. “Kiss me and I’ll tell you.”

















