James:
“I don’t get why I have to meet them, though,” Casper grumbled, following grudgingly along in the other boy’s wake. James rolled his eyes.
“Cuz you need more friends, Casper,” he replied shortly, lowering his voice a little as they approached the table. “Just me isn’t enough. Besides, I’m tired of having to choose between you and them every day.” At that, he raised his voice again. “Hey, guys! This is Casper. He’s a doof. Can we friend him?”
The table was mostly empty today, most of the group having likely set off once again for a game. Charlie was there, though, along with Nailah. At James’ call, the two of them glanced up from the array of monster cards scattered across the tabletop. Charlie’s freckle dusted face split into a grin.
“Hey, James!” he called. “Hey, Casper. Give us like, two seconds, okay? I’m so close to a win here.”
Nailah snorted at that.
“Nope,” she murmured back, laying down a fresh card. “I cast ‘Barrel of Explodium’. That’s you out of life points. Again.”
“What? No,” Charlie protested. “That’s six damage. I had seven left. I know I did!”
James chuckled at that, tugging Casper in behind him as he sat.
“Don’t argue maths with Nai; she’ll just make you lose harder.”
Charlie shot him a scowl. He countered with the most innocent smile he could manage. Beside him, Casper sat down on the bench, frowning, eyes on the table.
James sighed, and prodded the older boy in the ribs.
“Oi. No clamming up for you.” When Casper didn’t respond, he turned his gaze to the others. “Casper runs a light deck. Keeps trying to beat me with just human soldiers and enchantments.”
“Well that’s lame,” Charlie replied, picking up James’ lead and thankfully running with it. “Humans are like, one one monsters across the board, right? How can you win without any decent champions?”
For a few moments, the words hung dead in the air, Casper still frowning quietly down at the tabletop. James had to force himself not to roll his eyes. Nailah had just opened her mouth to speak, when Casper replied, his voice small.
“Didn’t you just try and beat fire with a forest deck?”
The words earned him a smile from Nailah, and a playful glare from Charlie.
“Hey,” he shot back. “Don’t you go dissing my green deck. I’ll take the whole world on with nothing but bunnies and tiger spells.”
“Say that after you beat me, kay?” Nailah countered. “My fire shall reign forever.”
“... I totally need to bring my deck sometime,” Casper murmured, giving the girl a small smile. “My humans will destroy you.”
“Foolish mortal,” Charlie countered as he gathered up his cards. “It takes more than mere men to counter the gods.” He gave James a nudge on the shoulder. “You bring your deck today?”
“Nope.” James shrugged. “I had some other stuff going on. Got kinda distracted. Sorry.”
“Wanna play with mine?” Charlie held up his freshly collected deck. “See if you can beat the fire queen?”
“Uh, sure.” James took the proffered deck, and shuffled around the table to sit across from Nailah. Charlie shifted a little to give him some room, then, out of nowhere, grabbed him by the shoulder, and gave him a noogie, ignoring both his outrage and his protests.
“You can do this, squire. I believe in you.”
“Hah!” Nailah cackled, apparently getting rather into her fire queen bit. “You expect me lose to the likes of him? He is but a child with a borrowed deck!”
James didn’t answer immediately, he was too busy fixing his hair. He shot Charlie a glare, and the taller boy smiled back, sunny as ever. He slung an arm around James’ shoulders, and leaned in to murmur a loud stage whisper into his ear.
“She is weak, young padawan. Her fire runs only on stolen power. You can unseat her, child. It is your destiny.”
James took a moment to respond to that. He wanted to be annoyed at the taller boy for messing up his hair, but it was hard. He found himself distracted for a moment by the weight of the arm over his shoulders, his attention somehow drawn to how close Charlie’s lips were to his ear. He felt his cheeks grow a little warm.
Nope.
He wrenched his mind away from that particular line of thought with all the force he could muster, and shook himself.
“Not a child,” he grumbled, managing a decent approximation of irritation as he ducked out from under the other boy’s arm. “I’m a grown up now. My dad even let me say the F word.”
“He let you say fuck?” Casper asked, grinning. “Wow, such a cool dad.”
“Yeah,” Nailah murmured, shooting him a wink. “I wish my dad let me say fuck. That’d be so ace.”
“... Shut up.”
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“I guess I’ll have to stick with good ol’ Gee Willikers,” Casper continued. “Cuz I’m just not a real grown up yet.”
James glowered at him.
“Come on, guys,” Charlie cut in, his tone placating. “Don’t be mean. Saying the F word is very grown up.” James had just enough time to feel grateful, before the boy added a follow up. “I’m sure he’d be happy to demonstrate for us, too. Go on, James.”
“... What?” James looked into the other boy’s face at that, ready to protest. Charlie’s eyes were very blue under the auburn of his hair. He looked away.
“Swear,” Charlie murmured, humor teasing at the edges of his tone. “Say fuck, since you’re such a cool adult and all.”
“... I was only s’posed to say it once,” he muttered, glaring at his legs.
“Such an adult.”
“I hate all of you.”
----------------------------------------
The rest of the day passed uneventfully. James played cards with his friends, debated tv shows with Casper, and went to class. It was soothing, to an extent. Everything felt right again. All things in their place. He went home, did his homework, and played with Bex while Casper worked in the kitchen. When dinner came, he was honestly surprised. Turned out the other kid really knew how to cook. It was some kind of pasta, and it was delicious.
The only hiccup came when he and Casper moved to his room that evening, deciding to watch more shows while the other boy caught up on his school work.
He was sitting on the floor, muddling through an overlarge case of DVDs, when the other boy spoke, his voice quiet.
“So, Charlie’s kinda cool.”
James smiled to himself at that, still flicking through page after page of discs.
“I know, right?” he murmured. “It’s super cool you two are friends now. We do choir practice together, and he sings really we-”
“He’s cute, too,” Casper continued, his tone casual. “Don’t you think?”
James froze for a moment at that, his hands halting midway through tugging the right disc from its sleeve. It took his mind a few moments to wind back into motion.
“... What was that?” He glanced back at Casper. The boy was gazing at him, his expression calm.
“Charlie,” Casper repeated. “You think he’s cute.”
“... No I don’t,” James muttered, returning his gaze to the discs. “Don’t be dumb.”
“I’m not being dumb,” the other boy replied. “Empath, remember? Why’d you go all weird when he got close to you? Cuz it felt a like you were having sexy thou-”
“Can you not?” James asked, his voice caught between pleading and irritation. “Please? I felt weird for a couple seconds, that’s all. You don’t need to put any other stuff into it.” He pressed the button to open up the DVD player, and let out a huff. “... This is why being friends with you is weird. I never get to just deal with stuff on my own.”
For a few seconds, Casper didn’t respond. A part of James wondered if he’d hurt the other boy. He refused to look at him. When the older boy finally spoke, his voice was quiet.
“... You know there’s nothing wrong with liking boys, right?”
James let out an aggravated grunt at that.
“Of course I do,” he snapped. “I know there’s nothing wrong with it, but I don’t. Like. Boys.” He put as much emphasis as he could into the last few words, then shot his friend a scowl. Casper was still just sitting there, utterly calm. “Even if I did, I don’t want to deal with all the sexy stuff right now. It’s gross!”
For a few minutes, the two of them were quiet. James was angry. He wasn’t even all that sure why. He just knew that Casper was making him angry, with those stupid calm words and that stupid calm face. He glared at it.
After a long while, Casper sighed.
“Empathy sucks sometimes, you know?”
James didn’t answer. Instead, he just turned on the TV, and finished setting up the show. He got up, plopped himself down on the furthest edge of the bed from Casper that he could, and set his eyes to the screen, not really seeing it. Neither of them spoke.
He was still angry when, ten minutes later, his phone rang. He picked it up without bothering to look at the screen, and pressed it to his ear.
“Hello?”
“Hey, James. It’s Caleb.”
For the briefest moment, James felt a tiny flicker of relief undercut his rage. He’d been worried for a while there that Caleb might not want to speak to him.
“Hey,” he murmured, ignoring the way Casper’s gaze shifted across to him. “You uh… You doing okay?”
At the other end of the line, Caleb let out a tired laugh.
“No. Not really. I uh. I was hoping you could maybe come see me? I… Kinda wanted to explain some stuff.”
“Sure,” James replied, perplexed. “You got a time ready to do a meet up or-”
“I’m at the park near your place,” Caleb cut him off. “The one with the skateboards. Can you meet me? It’s kind of important.”
For a moment, James considered saying no. His parents were home. It was already getting dark. Then he glanced at Casper, felt another twinge of anger.
“Sure. Just give me a couple minutes. Kay?” He didn’t wait for a response before he hung up. He dropped the phone in his pocket, and stood up. The basketball sat in the far corner of the room, and he extended a hand, his power reaching out along with it to grasp the air inside the sphere. The practice bouts had helped a lot with his control, and now, the ball flew straight as he pulled it towards his hand, its movement quick, but steady.
“I’m going out,” he muttered behind himself. “I have some stuff to do.”
“... Stuff we’re allowed to talk about?” Casper asked, his tone a tad concerned.
“No,” James replied shortly. “Other stuff.”
----------------------------------------
It wasn’t too hard for James to get his parents to let him outside. They might be a little restrictive, but it was still early enough in the evening, and they knew he could defend himself. He promised to be back in an hour, and stepped outside, the ball tucked under an arm.
One short walk later, he found Caleb at the park, sitting alone on the lip of the skate rink. Without a word, he walked over, and sat himself alongside him.
Caleb didn’t look too good. There were shadows under his eyes, a trace of blood and dust still clinging to his clothes from yesterday’s fight. James didn’t ask about the fresher blood on his knuckles, nor the dried tears across his cheeks.
“... What’s up?” he asked, turning his gaze down into the skating pit. He absently tossed the basketball down into it, and watched the thing as it bounced.
“... I’ve been lying to you,” came the response, Caleb, like himself, opting to just watch the ball as it moved. “Wanted to say sorry I’m a shitty friend.”
James wanted to say the words were surprising, but they weren’t. He wasn’t an idiot.
“You mean you’re not a teenage monster hunter?” he asked, his voice deadpan.
Caleb chuckled.
“Actually, that’s the only thing I told you that was true. It’s the rest that was all BS. I am a monster hunter, but I wasn’t trying to train you.” James chanced a glance at the older boy. Caleb was still just watching the ball, his hands clasping together in his lap, still gently dripping blood. He returned his gaze to the ball, and gave it a little push with his wind to keep it bouncing.
“... What were you trying to do, then?”
At that, Caleb allowed himself another short chuckle, and closed his eyes.
“Honestly, I was planning to kill you.”