âWhat about this one?â I ask, stopping in the open doorway of my bedroom. Iâve lost count of how many times Iâve done this. The first time I attempted to strike a pose, this time I just lift and drop my arms like itâll show off the sweater any better. Iâm running out of energy.
Khent glances up from the stove, the whisk in his hand scraping the bottom of the pot. âMy answer hasnât changed.â
I grumble, because itâs not a helpful answer.
âBabe, you look fine in everything. Youâre stressing yourself out over nothing,â Khent says from the kitchenette.
Heâs making some kind of lichen-based soup, which, while it smells good, tastes like absolutely nothing to me. Vaguely reminiscent of cardboard, perhaps. I hope thereâs some leftover bouillon cubes in the fridge so I can mix half of one into my bowl.
Heâs making soup, I suspect, because Iâm starting to stress him out.
I return to digging through my closet, tossing one thing after another onto my bed like a big, uncomfortable nest of nerves. Iâve pretty much run out of outfits to try out, and I still canât decide what to wear.
âSheâs going to love you no matter what.â
âI know,â I repeat for the tenth time. I canât really explain that this is as much a balm for my anxiety as it is exacerbating it. I do this every time thereâs some big event I feel like Iâll be judged just for existing at.
âThen whatâs the problem?â
I just kind of grumble and moan through a non-answer. I know itâs not all that important and that as long as Iâm not wearing a t-shirt with an obscure gnome metal band, Khentâs mom isnât going to think much about what Iâm wearing.
Still, I wish I had some kind of manual to study. Or a script. Something to fall back on when I talk myself into a corner.
âMeeting your parents went well,â he points out, like he can reason with my thought process.
âI mean, thatâs different. Iâm pretty sure they still think weâre just dating,â I tell him, trying to keep my voice even, but thereâs a hitch of guilt that gives me away. I wince as I drop some more shoes on the ground. âYou remember how utterly weird I was about the whole mating bond thing at first. If I introduce it slowly to them, I think itâll go over better.â
I hear the stove click down to its lowest setting, the creak of the floor under his weight as he goes to sit on my couch.
âHow slowly?â
âMaybe we could tell them weâre mated⦠in a year?â
Khent hums a noise that Iâve now come to understand as âwhy do humans take so long to do anythingâ.
Some of the time I agree.
I pluck the last few things out of my closet and frown at them. I toss them onto the pile and shuffle back out of my room. I sigh heavily and cross the apartment to flop onto his lap.
Looking up at him, I trace the lines of his jaw with my fingertips. Heâs borrowed one of my scrunchies to put his hair in possibly one of the worst buns ever constructed, and the black t-shirt heâs wearing fits his shoulders extra snug. I wonder if Iâll ever get used to seeing him out of work clothes.
âWe still have to do all that paperwork for MR now,â I remind him. âWouldnât want to break the news until it was at least official.â
âThe paperwork isnât going to take a whole year,â he says.
âMmm,â I hum playfully, but also because heâs still underestimating how slowly things get processed.
âThink of it this way: theyâll already have liked you for a while, so theyâll be excited to hear the news. Even if they donât totally get what it means. And weâre not telling them about the Blood Fever part,â I ramble on, even though I know he doesnât need any more convincing. Weâre definitely in agreement on that. âWhereas, when I meet your mom, I have one shot to make a good impression.â
I donât think heâs listening, though, the hundredth time Iâve said that just melds with all the previous times. Hell, Iâm tired of hearing me say it. His gaze goes distant and his eyebrows narrow. For a moment I wonder if heâs staring at the stove, trying to figure out if he turned it down enough or not.
âShould we⦠be doing⦠the human equivalent?â he asks slowly, like heâs not sure heâs expressing himself right.
The human equivalent, of what, a mating bond? I donât think there is one. But I watch the distant expression on his face, like heâs realizing heâs forgotten something important.
I stare at him a few moments blankly before I realize what he means. I bolt up in his lap and put my nose to his.
He stares back at me, and after a moment, takes off his glasses because I am fogging them up.
âWhat?â
âYou fucked up, just now.â
He lifts an eyebrow, rubbing the corner of his t-shirt on the lens. âDid I?â
A maniacal grin spreads across my face. I kiss his neck and repeat gleefully, âYou. Fucked. Up.â
âI donât do this to you when you donât know about Orcish things,â he points out. Heâs right, but unlike him, I enjoy annoying the people I love.
âAnd I donât make you order your own needlessly complicated coffee when we go across the street,â I counter.
âNo one needs to be as extroverted as those baristas,â he sighs.
âTheyâre not gonna bite,â I roll my eyes, and drag my teeth along his jawline for effect. And for me.
He shifts in his seat, moving me with him. He props his head up in his hand, elbow on his knee as he looks at me. âSo whatâd I do wrong?â
I wriggle my way into a more comfortable position, laying out across the couch, my head in his lap. I can barely contain how evil this makes me feel. Iâm going to show him videos of flash mobs and over the top public proposals. âFirst, the asking the question part is like, half of the whole thing. Itâs a big deal. Iâm not even supposed to know youâre gonna ask me.â
âWhyâs that?â
âBecause you donât know if Iâm going to say yes or no.â
Khent scoffs, because that part is clearly ridiculous to him. âYouâre my mate. Why would you say no?â
âSecondlyââ
âThereâs more?â
âSECONDLY,â I push on, extra determined now, âSome people make as big a deal about it as the actual ceremony.â
âOh?â
âYeah. They get fancy about it. Some people wait until theyâre in front of everybody they know, and then get everyoneâs attention on them. And then they ask the question, not knowing how itâs going to turn out,â I whisper, like Iâm telling a campfire story.
Iâm quick to pull my phone from my pocket, and start searching videos of public proposals gone wrong. I scroll for a moment, looking for a particularly awful one that Lily had sent me a while back.
I glance back at Khent when I canât find it, and realize heâs gone stone-still, and deeply quiet.
âBabe?â
This big guy who canât make his way through a coffee order without apologizing four times, and wonât make eye contact with strangers unless he absolutely has to, looks like heâs actually considering everything I just teased him with.
It looks like it takes him every effort to ask, âAnd⦠thatâs something you want?â
The look on his face softens my heart and melts away the mischief that had possessed me a moment ago. I reach up and touch his face, brushing my thumb against his cheek.
âIâve already got what I want.â