A young woman sits on the docks at midnight.
Morgan lets her bare feet hang in the water, turning her eyes up to the sky above her head. This specific dock is right beneath a perfect clearing in the trees where, if one looks straight up, they can see the moon and the stars. She hums to herself in that comfortable register, the pitch which she knows is difficult for others to hear.
She spends so much of her life changing, and these moments are the ones where she fully remembers that. These moments when she’s sitting, in the wide open world, making noise that feels comfortable and okay and... and no one can hear it. At least not the way she can. She realizes it when she remarks on the intricacy of the animal’s sounds in the forest and no one can relate. She knows very well how much of herself she changes, but she doesn’t mind.
She sighs, leaning back to lay down on the docs and study the stars, her fingers lacing behind her head. She doesn’t mind changing, if it lets her see more. Her recent trip away from the city has only made her want to see more, learn more, meet more people.
She smiles to herself, kicking her legs where they sit over the edge of the dock before sighing and deciding to do what she rarely allows herself to do, for fear that she won’t want to come back. She sets her things on the dock, folding up her jacket and stockings and setting them aside before sliding to the end of the dock and jumping down, letting the cold, fresh water wash over her head. She immediately moves to dive as low as she can, taking a deep breath and letting the water move through her gills. She immediately feels more at ease, sighing in a rush of bubbles as she grips the rocks so she can sit still and look at the stars now.
Through the water, they look so much different. She grins, mentally noting each one and setting off to swim down the river, further into the forest. She knows she’ll return home, if only for her mother’s sake. The animals that pass pay her no mind, aside from getting caught in her hair and making her take a moment to untangle them and pet over their bodies in apology. The world here is so much easier to understand, quiet and dark and gentle, every ebb and flow of the current moves her with it, leading her along the bottom of the river with little effort.
She stays for a few hours in this little world, one where she fits and where she is understood, where nothing is expected and she’s learned so much, before finally breaching through the water and leaning on the bank, slowly getting herself used to breathing air again, getting used to the scratching, grating feeling.
But when she does, she finds a surprising thing. Another person, sitting on the bank this far into the forest, silently staring at the stars. A fox lays beside them, it’s head in their lap as if it were a tamed dog. It doesn’t even look up when she breaches the water. The other looks down at Morgan as she makes a surprised chirping sound, instinctively sinking further into the water as they make eye contact. They look her over, their bright, wide orange eyes taking in what’s before them before they speak.
“...You’re... the girl from the guard. The quiet one,” It’s when they speak that she recognizes them. They’re that dragon who comes in and out of the city several times a week, picking up supplies for their mother and always refusing help bringing the massive baskets of things home. She nods in response to their statement, pushing herself up enough onto the bank to fold her arms atop it, looking at the other questioningly. They pause a moment, reading her expression before looking back to the sky.
“I’m out here for the same reason you are. The stars look best at this time, when everyone’s lights are out,” They mumble, their voice quiet. “And it’s quiet”
Morgan thinks for a moment about asking how they’re getting a fox to lay with them like that before she decides against it. She wants to ask something else instead.
“...May I sit with you?” She asks, pushing herself up onto the bank. The other nods, glancing her way.
“Yes, if you’d like. The stars don’t belong to me,” And with that, they go back to their own stargazing, Morgan sitting on the bank and staring up at the sky herself. And somehow, sitting here in silence with this strange, quiet stranger... she feels more at home than she has for a long while.












