She rolled her eyes when he bumped her shoulder and complimented her sous chef abilities. While she technically did help in preparing diner, she did not think that brushing a glaze onto the salmon really counted. Signe continued to enjoy her meal, and luckily, had already swallowed when Charlie made a quip about being good at a lot of things. Her eyes darted to his face, the heat in her cheeks rising immediately at that smile on his lips. God, didn’t she know it. She knew far too well how good at things he could be. She bumped her shoulder against his in return, the ghost of a smile on her face.
Finishing her plate, she set it down on the coffee table and curled back into the couch and into Charlie’s side, cradling her wine glass in her hand. No matter how many times she watched this movie, she couldn’t help the emotions that welled up in her chest. Charlie finished his own food and pulled the blanket from off the back of the sofa to lay it across their laps. Ellie’s voice whispers, "It’s not finding your other half. It’s the trying and reaching and failing.” Her fingers tightened around his hand beneath the blanket, as if anchoring herself. Signe glanced at him from the corner of her eye and while Charlie didn’t meet her gaze, his thumb stroked over her knuckles a silent, reaffirming gesture.
The painting scene was probably one of Signe’s favorites. Aster in her letters shared about something a painting teacher had once told her, “The difference between a good painting and a great painting is typically five strokes. The question is, of course, which five strokes?” The question always seemed so oddly personal to Signe – a girl who had spent her whole life trying to identify those strokes and get them just right. However, this was the first time in a long time that she allowed herself to take in the full message of the scene as Ellie and Aster take turns pondering, “Maybe that’s the thing. If you do ruin your painting, you gotta know you have everything in you to get to that pretty good painting again. But if you never do the bold stroke, you’ll never know if you could’ve had a great painting.” That felt so much like her, right in that moment, with Charlie.
For someone like her, who’d spent so much of her life being measured, composed and careful, Charlie felt like one of her bold strokes. He’s warm, and chaotic and unafraid to say what he feels. Letting herself fall into this thing between them was brave. The quote mirrored so many of the silent risks she’d already taken with him and Signe felt something catch in her chest. As the movie progressed, Charlie suddenly sat up, gaze focused intently on the screen. Signe merely watched him, and smiled gently when he glanced her way. For a moment, they just stared at one another. Then she leaned in and kissed his cheek, almost at the corner of his mouth, resting her forehead against his temple briefly before leaning back just enough to settle against him again, hand returning to his. There was so many words the swarmed her head and it was too soon for so many of them to be uttered. So, Signe kept this moment and locked it away in her heart for the time being. Just for herself.
The rest of the movie played out, the dramatic climax at the church scene and everything that unraveled afterwards. Signe watched Charlie’s face for his reactions, curious and filled with all sorts of affection as he seemed to be truly invested in her favorite movie. She wasn’t sure if it was for sure, but something in his eyes told her it wasn’t. It only charmed her to him even more. “So, what did you think?” she asked, after Ellie made the decision to head off to college, and both Paul and Aster are set off on their own paths as well and the credits rolled.
Charlie gave a breathless chuckle, eyes still half-lidded from the kiss as he reached for his plate. "Technically, that was the appetizer," he said, voice low, still tinged with mischief as he handed her back her plate. "I’m just keepin’ you on your toes." He watched as she took her first bite, lips quirking into a grin when she groaned in satisfaction. There was a moment, brief but unmistakable, where pride settled warm in his chest, right alongside the part of him that couldn’t believe she was really here, cross-legged on his sofa, eating food he’d made for her. When she complimented the meal, her eyes wide and genuine, Charlie shook his head and smiled down at his plate, humbled in the way he always was when praise came without pretense. "Hey, you made it too," he said, bumping her shoulder gently. "You were brilliant back there. Proper sous chef material. Fast learner, good instincts. Might’ve even upstaged me if you weren’t so distracting." He snuck a bite of his salmon, chewed thoughtfully, then looked at her sideways, that slow-burning smile playing at his lips again. "I’m good at a lot of things, y’know."
The opening credits of The Half of It rolled, and conversation drifted into silence. Charlie leaned back, one arm slung across the back of the couch, the other holding his fork. He watched her in the glow of the screen, how she seemed to fold into the film slowly, her fingers curling around the stem of her wine glass, her mouth parted just slightly in quiet concentration. Every now and again, she’d glance at him and then look away quickly, like the story had pulled something out of her she wasn’t ready to name. Somewhere between Ellie’s first voiceover and Paul’s first awkward letter, Charlie had abandoned his nearly-finished plate. The blanket from the back of the couch now rested over both of their laps, his hand finding hers, and without thinking much of it, he let his head rest lightly against her shoulder. He didn’t say anything when the scene played where Ellie helps Paul learn how to talk about love, feeding him lines. But he felt something tighten in his chest when she whispered, "It’s not finding your other half. It’s the trying and reaching and failing." His thumb moved across the top of her hand beneath the blanket.
Charlie sat up slightly as Ellie and Paul’s conversation drifted into something quieter, more honest. Onscreen, Paul was fumbling through his feelings, and Ellie’s words pierced Charlie like they were his own. "What else could I like about her?" Paul began, Ellie replying, "I don’t know. How her eyes look right into yours. How she twirls her hair when she’s reading. How her laugh bursts out like she can’t help herself.. and she stops being so perfect. For just a few moments…” Charlie’s breath hitched. His eyes didn’t leave the screen, but his fingers curled more firmly around Signe’s hand beneath the blanket. "She has at least five different voices. How you can live in an ocean of her thoughts and feel like she knows… like really knows." He turned his head just enough to glance at her, eyes catching hers for a second. No words. Just that steady look and the faintest pull of a smile at the corner of his mouth. Because, yeah. That’s what it felt like. Like being known.
Signe’s face lit up when Charlie pulled out the photos and moved closer, warmth blooming in her chest the moment their shoulders brushed. She clutched the photos gently, giggles escaping her with each new picture she flipped through. Signe let their shoulders stay pressed together, grounding herself in the feeling of his heat against her skin. “Oh, Charlie,” she breathed, laughing especially hard at the sight of the bold prints and the sunglasses that looks ready to swallow his face. She held the prints in her hand as if they were precious artifact. “Your mom might be my new favorite person if she can keep supplying me with these,” Signe teased. The way that Charlie listened to her and didn’t dismiss her feelings cracked something inside her chest wide open. He spoke in soft and gentle tones, not trying to make the words anything more than what they were, and it made the back of her throat tighten. Not from sadness, but from such total acceptance – from being so quickly understood by this strange and wonderful boy. Her fingers tightened as he held her hand and confessed he wasn’t all charm and jokes, and that he was scared too, and that he was still trying, still chasing the things he wanted even when it terrified him. And then he started talking about himself – little things, mundane things, some slightly more important things. Signe blinked repeatedly, swallowing the sudden burn in her throat. She let out a shaky break and shook her head before looking at him. “You make opening up seem…less scary.” Her thumb brushed along the back of his hand, mirroring the way he’d been touching her. Signe took a moment to gather herself and then nodded, smiling faintly. “Okay. My turn.” “I’m Signe Holmström. My mom’s name is Sigrid, dad is Søren … Don’t worry, I’ll help you with the pronunciation,” she smirked to herself, already imagining Charlie struggling with the task. “They’ve always given me everything they could, and while my head understands they’re proud of me…part of me feels like I need to be…better? Successful? In order to be worthy of all that they’ve given me.” She hesitated, the shine in her eyes flickering for just a second before she pushed forward with a small smile. “My favorite color’s green – but like a pastel, sage green. I’ve lived in the States for ten years now, but I still miss Malmö every winter when we don’t get any snow.” Her eyes met his and she fought a smirk as she continued. “I’m terrible at running, I was always more of a swimmer if I had to pick a sport. Hot cheetos are my guilty pleasure snack. I hate olives, can’t stand ‘em,” Signe wrinkled her nose in distaste. “I’m a little bit of a perfectionist. And like…scary organized. You should see my closet sometime. I hate when a house or room is too quiet, so I sing to myself. I’m God awful at board games,” she let out a watery laugh, wiping any tears with her fingers. “You’d absolutely destroy me.” “But…I’m trying too,” she whispered. “Trying to be brave.”
Charlie laughed, the sound warm and easy as he watched her light up at the mention of his past questionable fashion choices. At her excited invite, he didn’t hesitate to slide closer, closing the small space between them as if it were the most natural thing in the world. He reached into the bottom of the basket, pulling out the folded stack of photos. “These were the only ones I could dig up from my football days,” he said, nudging his shoulder softly against hers as their arms touched. “But Mum said she’s got some tucked away back home, reckons they’re too good to keep to herself, so I’m sure you’ll be gettin’ those soon enough.”
Their shoulders stayed pressed together, the nerves he’d carried into the evening long gone now, replaced by something calmer, easier. He handed over the photos, loud designer prints, bold patters, shorts and shoes that did not match the top half of his outfit, sunglasses far too large, and immediately covered his face with one hand, peeking at her through the gaps between his fingers. “Listen, I’ve made a lot of mistakes in my life—but these outfits? Top of the list.”
When he felt her pinky hook into his, his hand dropped, eyes catching hers just as her smile softened and her expression shifted, just enough that if he hadn’t been paying attention, he might’ve missed it. But he was paying attention. His brow knit together slightly, quieting, leaning into the moment as she spoke. “That’s what a date’s supposed to be, yeah?” he said gently. “Gettin’ to know each other. The whole picture, not just the bits we like showin’ off.” The smile on his face softened, not playful now but real, open. When she mentioned him only knowing the charming version of her, he let out a soft chuckle, shaking his head.
“You think this is me all the time?” He tilted his head, gaze steady on hers. “I promise. I’m not all charm and jokes. We’re all a bit fucked up underneath, aren’t we? It’s just about findin’ someone you can be fucked up with.” He shifted, leaning in just slightly, not to flirt, but to assure, “There’s no tellin’ what we’ll learn about each other. But you don’t have to worry about scarin’ me off. No pressure here. None at all.” He paused for a beat, his voice somehow softer now. “I’m scared too, y’know… a lot of the time. About work, about leavin' home and me mum behind, about what comes next.. But I’ve been tryin’ real hard not to let it stop me from goin’ after what I want. Not after missin' out on football.. I won't make that mistake again.”
Then, because the air felt a little too heavy for a second, and because lightening it was as much habit as it was care, he bumped their shoulders together, grinning. “Besides, I’m from Moss Side. Some of my mates were proper bad news. I don’t scare easy.” His grin widened, teasing. “I can sit through all of Nightmare on Elm Street and only have to cover my eyes, like, twice.” The tension eased between them again as he laced his fingers fully through hers, linking their hands together without rush, without asking. Just sure.
“Well… Hughes is my last name,” he started, his thumb gently stroking her knuckles. “Mum’s name is Wendy. Dad’s Charles.. yeah, I’m a Jr. But no one’s allowed to call me Charles. Been Charlie since I were a baby.” He smiled at her, eyes crinkling at the edges. “Favorite color’s blue.. but it’s a very specific blue. I’ll point it out when I see it.” “My injury was already ten years ago now, but I have some nerve damage, so long shifts in the kitchen can be hell on it. And runs, but I still go on 'em.” His lips pressed together for a second before the smile returned, a little sheepish. “I love video games. Hate broccoli. Tried, can’t do it. Absolute sucker for sushi, though. And I’m annoyin’ to watch football with ‘cause I get loud like I’m right there in the stands.” He gave her fingers a soft squeeze. “I’m a bit uptight in the kitchen. I mean, my coworkers would probably say very uptight.” A chuckle pushed past his lips. “And I’m ridiculously competitive. Doesn’t matter what it is, cards, board games, coin toss.. I hate losin’.” Charlie leaned his head to the side, considering her with a smile that felt steadier now, more sure. “But I’m workin’ on it.” His thumb brushed lightly across her hand once more, his eyes meeting hers fully again. “Like I said… determined sort of guy.”
Watching Charlie react to her playlist was surprisingly one of the more intimate experiences of her life. They were both allowing songs say the words they were too scared or hesitant to say out loud and then the reactions? The subtle touches of acknowledgement and acceptance. It sent every nerve-ending of hers on fire. She giggled at the way the absolutely lit up at the A*Teens cover of Mamma Mia and found another reason to sit him down in front of one of her favorite musicals one of these days. “Sure, I’m not afraid of a good karaoke stage,” she grinned. He lay back when Night Changes came on, and her eyes were glued on him as he mouthed the lyrics. His hand found hers and she squeezed it gently, silent acknowledgement. When he glanced at her talking about the right person, she smiled shyly breaking the eye contact. “You’re sounding very philosophical these days, y’know?” The song shifted again and she wasn’t sure what was more overwhelming. The way that Charlie’s whole body had responded to the song, or the fact that he didn’t try to hide it. He didn’t pretend it wasn’t affecting him. He just looked at her like he saw her and felt all the heat she’d meant to bottle into that song and decided he wanted it. And then… If dinner weren’t in the oven… Frankly, dinner wouldn’t have stopped her. She was about to say as much, but Charlie stood and walked away. That fact didn’t break the spell, but it just made her smirk. Her eyes followed him as he walked back to the kitchen, calling over his shoulder to set the movie up. She rested her arms on the back of the couch and just looked at him for a moment. Her cheeks were flushed and her heart was racing, but she couldn’t help the giddy feeling she had knowing she’d affected him like that. She reached for the remote and queued up the movie, but didn’t press play, waiting for him to return with their meal. Signe sank back into the couch, curling her legs underneath her, before she called back, playful and undeniably flirty. “Just so you know…that was the mild playlist.” A beat and then. “I have another one, but you’d probably need to cancel all your dinner plans for that one.”
Charlie gave a low, quiet laugh as her first song played, his blush rising again, this time not from embarrassment, but from the weight of what she wasn’t saying out loud. Think I Wanna See You Again. He didn’t need the explanation. He just glanced at her, lips parting like he might say something, but then shut his mouth again. Instead, he reached over and let his hand rest lightly on her thigh, thumb tracing an idle, slow circle against the fabric there. "I was already plannin’ on seein’ you again," he said finally, voice just barely above a whisper. "But… nice to know it’s mutual."
When White Houses came on, he listened with quiet focus, watching her from the side. He could see how grounded she was in the lyrics, like they held parts of her story she hadn’t said out loud. When she mentioned her move, he gave a small nod, nudging her knee with his. "I get that," he murmured. "Feelin’ like you’re brand new somewhere and tryin’ to look like you’ve always belonged." And then Mamma Mia started. He looked over at her, grinning like he’d just caught her red-handed. "You're jokin' me! My mum is obsessed with Abba. And with that musical too, yeah?" Charlie laughed, delighted. "That’s brilliant! We never had this remix-y madness. I feel like I’m hearin’ ABBA on a sugar high. Might have to add this to my workout playlist." He reached for his wine, still chuckling, and looked at her with soft, amused eyes as he took a sip. "You realise this means you have to sing one of these at karaoke with me someday, yeah?"
As Night Changes came on, something in him shifted. He placed his wine back down, leaning back to rest his head on the back of the couch. Charlie let the song wash over him, his eyes fluttering shut like it was instinct. The lyrics held a kind of gentle ache he hadn’t noticed before, not when he was sixteen, fumbling through the chords of the song, trying to impress a girl who didn’t know his name. But here, now, with Signe beside him, it hit differently. He reached out, without opening his eyes, and found her hand again, interlacing their fingers. When the last note faded, he didn’t let go. "I like that one," he said softly. "Feels like it means more now than it ever did when I was a kid." He looked at her, gaze steady and honest. "Maybe that’s the thing about the right person.. they make old songs feel new."
And then, Dangerous Woman. Charlie sat up straighter the second the sultry opening hit the speakers. His entire body tensed, not in discomfort, but in heightened awareness. Of her. Of the song. Of everything left unsaid between them. He'd heard it before, in pubs, in clubs, maybe even in the locker room once or twice, but he'd never heard it in this context. It had never felt this powerful. "Oh, bloody hell," he muttered under his breath, letting out a nervous laugh. His thumb dragged down his bottom lip as he tried, and failed, to keep a straight face. "If dinner weren’t in the oven, I’d be suggestin’ we table the rest of the playlist and revisit this one. Thoroughly." His voice was teasing, but there was a genuine flush to his cheeks now, the tension in his jaw not entirely performative. Charlie stood, forcing himself to break the spell before he did something impulsive. "Right, okay. That’s me ruined," he called over his shoulder as he made his way to the kitchen. "You mind settin’ up the movie, love? I’ll plate us up." There was a long beat of silence, and then, from the kitchen "… Also, that was the hottest playlist I’ve ever been emotionally wrecked by. So thanks for that!"
#𝐁𝐲𝐒𝐢𝐠𝐧𝐞: a study in soft things
Signe let out a soft, relieved laugh, handing over the tangled mess of her bracelet across the table toward the girl without hesitation. “Thank God,” she muttered under her breath, offering the other a sheepish smile. “Thank you truly. I was literally just two seconds away from tying a note and pretending it was supposed to look like that.” Signe leaned her elbow on the table and rested her chin on her hand as she watched the girl tackle what she viewed as the gargantuan task of untangling her bracelet. “It really didn’t look that complicated from the tutorial.”
Though Georgia usually works with wire or chains, she isn't unfamiliar with the old art of friendship bracelets. She'd made many in her time, not very often for anyone in particular, but a young Georgia could at least pretend someone else had the other half if she wore hers proudly on her wrist. She hadn't actually intended to come over to the station, but the call had eventually gotten too much to resist, especially with her friends busy socialising with people Georgia doesn't and has no interest in knowing. It'd been nice at first, to have a moment to herself amongst the chaos of an otherwise heated party, but a voice beside her crying out for her help isn't unwelcome either. "No, no. Give it here; let me have a crack at it." She insists, already carefully laying hers down flat in front of her. "It comes with practice, like the first few times you'll have braided your hair and it all got tangled."
Even if she hadn’t confirmed Signe’s suspicions, she would have immediately been able to tell the girl was an artist from the way her eyes sparked with excitement as she spoke about her paintings. The way the words would come out in an enthusiastic rush was a dead giveaway. Signe laughed, glad that the girl related to the sudden itch of inspiration and the frustration at not planning ahead for the moment. “I like to think of the different ways people interpret art is pretty similar to the different ways people can style the same item of clothing,” Signe smiled, fiddling with the ends of her hair, agreeing that it was an interesting phenomenon. “Right? It’s happened to me enough times that you think I’d just learn to carry a sketchpad with me wherever I go.” “I love that you’re painting sunsets,” she said softly, her voice warm and thoughtful. “Most people might think there’s only one way to pain them but it’s just like you said – the time of year, the time of day, the colors can all be so vastly different. And no matter what the way the colors blend together, it’s always beautiful.” Signe tilted her head to the side as she considered the other girl’s question. “I haven’t worked on any sunsets myself lately – I did a few for assignments in high school, though. It kind of turned into this abstract piece–lots of messy layers. It turned into an emotional map of sorts…like this layer was when I was overwhelmed, this layer is where I felt okay again.” She giggled, shaking her head at the memory of the class assignment. “As a teenage girl who’d just moved across the ocean, I bet you can imagine what a mess it was.”
" i do paint, yeah. i have one that i finally got the chance to finish the other day. it's not entirely done yet or good enough to be shown, but it will be eventually. " bella loved to get the chance to talk about her art whenever she had gotten the chance. " it's always been interesting to me how everyone can interpret a certain painting, you know? " the brunette listened the other speak as her eyes had scanned around the other paintings that were on their displays. " i was just about to say the same. sometimes it makes me feel like i should've just brought it to sketch down a simple idea if the inspiration happened to strike me at a random moment. being in a place like this it's almost hard for it not to, you know? " a quick nod of her head soon followed at signe's next comment. " that's always how it ends up working out! you could've had an idea in your head and then the outcome isn't always entirely as you may have pictured for it to be. " there was so many different things that she genuinely loved to paint about. " lately, i've been painting sunsets. there's just something that seems so peaceful about it, some have more of a fall vibe. while others have more of a summer kind of vibe to it. kind of makes me wonder what my next one will possibly end up being. have you worked on any recently? "
SIGNE: Omg!! You're so embarrassing sometimes! SIGNE: I meant there aren't really any juicy details -- it was our first date! SIGNE: But pay me the hot cheetos random and I'll tell you all there is to know (:
Adriana: If “averting my eyes” means aggressively zooming in on my phone to confirm it was you two… then yes, absolutely, my eyes were definitely averted 👀
Adriana: Hot Cheetos are ALL YOURS if I get the full rundown. No holding back! I want the juicy details. The last cute romance I witnessed was literally in a tv show.
Adriana: Hot Cheetos and hot men!! I’m so happy for you, babe 😭🥰
Signe laughed, shaking her head. “Okay, Goldilocks, don’t worry,” she quipped, grinning at her friend. “I do listen ot you, sometimes. As long as you’re not trying to get me arrested.” But Adri’s tone shifted and her heart swelled at it. This was the reason Adriana was her closest friend. She was a whirlwind of chaos and mischief, but at the heart of it all burned that fierce loyalty. She was that same cool, older girl that had taken her under her wing and helped her gain her confidence. She thought once Adriana graduated, that would be the end of their friendship, but she’d kept in contact. Visited frequently. had sleepovers, weekly check-ins. Watching in awe and panic as the older girl would sneak in and out of windows with a chaotic grin and wink. And so that’s how they’d spent the last decade. “I don’t know if there is a catch, yet. Like I told you, I keep waiting for the other shoe to drop,” Signe admitted softly, her cheeks still flushed from her confessions. “He’s surprisingly gentle with me. Everything gets kind of fuzzy when I’m around him.” It was true. Probably her biggest anxiety over whatever she had going on with Charlie was that it was so easy to fall for him. She was moving so fast and bouncing all over the steps she’d outlined in her mind as a girl. And it was even more terrifying how, when she was around him, she didn’t really care about any of that. She just lucked seeing him smile that gleeful boyish grin. “But if he does turn out to be a total trash monster in disguise, you’ll be my first phone call.”
"Excuse me!" Adriana gasped, a hand dropping to the table with a smack. "I am the perfect amount, thank you very much. Not too much, not too little, just right.." She leaned forward on her forearms, eyes sparkling with amusement as she tilted her head toward Signe. "And yes, good. You should listen to me more often. I’ve only got a decade of questionable decisions to back it up."
There was something about watching Signe now, her flushed cheeks, the barely contained grin, the glow of someone falling fast. Something about seeing her like this tugged at Adriana’s heart. She remembered a younger Signe so vividly. All wide eyes and hushed warnings while Adriana climbed out windows with a wink. And now she was blooming. Rule-breaking in her own way. It was an amazement to witness.
Adriana laughed softly, nudging Signe with her elbow. "Okay, this is all very cute. Like, dangerously sweet, I might actually throw up. You’ve got that dreamy look, and I love that for you.. but," She lifted a brow, voice dipping just enough to anchor the teasing with something real, "What’s the catch? The flaw?" She paused. "Because you know I love that you’re in this, but I’m not above fighting someone if they mess it up. I’ve been slacking on kickboxing lately," She flashed a smile, warm and deadly, "and I really need a reason to get back in shape."
Signe smiled gently, the gesture growing even softer as she registered the one of the many pet names her father had for her. Her gaze lingered on the painting for a second before turning towards her father and shaking her head. “It’s fine. The moment’s passed,” she shrugged, her eyes warm even as her heart felt heavy with a feeling she couldn’t quite name. “Fika fixes most things, anyway.” She never forgot how lucky she was. As a teenager, she’d been absolutely terrified of deviating from the path she was so certain was expected of her. But her parents had never scoffed or rolled their eyes at her passion, never sat her down to steer her back toward something ‘more practical.’ Signe knew that was not the case for everyone. That not everyone had parents who would let them want different things–to let them just try. The chestnut-haired girl wrapped an arm around her father’s waist, already leading him away from the painting and back out towards the street. “There’s a cute little coffee shop a few blocks over that I was wanting to check out, if you’re up for a bit of walking.” Signe glanced up at him, a measured easy smile on her lips. But behind her eyes lay a quiet resolve. She would make every sacrifice her parents had ever made for her matter. She had to. For herself—and for them.
pappa. it never got old, hearing her refer to him in the same way that she had since she was able to talk. he remembered those first syllables so vividly — after signe had mastered ‘mamma’ he sat, stared, and watched her for hours on end, tuned into her young babbling like radio static. just when he had almost lost hope, she had mustered the first p, and then the rest of the syllables. in that moment, søren had vowed never to underestimate his only child again. and he never had. it would have been easy for the two parents to turn their nose up at signe’s desire to pursue something creative. a doctor and a professor, with enough credits after their names to make up an entire new alphabet … it didn’t matter, so long as signe was happy. the holmströms had money — søren had worked in order to be a provider for their family — and there had never been any doubt that helping their daughter chase her dreams was where that wealth belonged. he didn’t always understand it, but that didn’t mean he didn’t support it. “oh, sötnos, i didn’t mean to ruin your focus.” søren straightened his back and followed signe’s gaze the the painting she had been admiring. he still couldn’t quite believe that their daughter had ended up with his pale gaze. “can i help you get it back? there’s nothing fika can’t fix.” one arm draped around her shoulders and squeezed lightly. “is there anywhere you had in mind ? ”
Signe glanced over the man’s bracelet and bit back a smile, offering her own half-finished bracelet over to him. “Honestly? I still think you’re doing better than me,” she said with a soft laugh. She watched him, the way he carefully worked through the knot in her thread. “Thanks,” she murmured, not just for the assistance but for the encouraging words. “I think I needed that reminder.” The truth was, she had been taking the task a little too seriously. It came second nature to her to approach each task as if it were life or death. She exerted the effort because the bracelets felt like an apology for the time she hadn’t been able to spend with her friends lately. There had been a lot of trying, but not a lot of succeeding. Signe often expected perfection when no one else demanded it of her. “At the end of the day, it is the thought that counts. Although, I can’t say my ego hasn’t taken a hit for being out done by a bunch of string.”
"I don't know how much help I'll be," Isaiah wasn't faring much better, clearly having learned nothing from the jewelry making class the community put on not too long ago, "but I can certainly try." He gently set aside the mess of a friendship bracelet he was attempting to put together to lend the other a hand. "I was thinking the same thing about the one I was working on, but I think I'll still end up finishing it." He commented as he worked on untangling the string for the other. "Then again, I don't expect my friends to actually wear these, so a few imperfections on my end aren't going to be the end of the world." He figured whatever friendship bracelets he gave away by the end of the night would simply be silly little trinkets his friends could store away somewhere, just a soft reminder that they were on his mind even when busy schedules kept them from hanging out as much as he'd like. "And if they do end up wearing them, then I'd assume they likely care more about the thought behind them rather than how they end up looking." His words were a gentle recommendation to not take the activity too seriously.
resoluxe \ˈre-zə-ˌluks\ 1. the quality of resolving a challenge or decision with sophistication, elegance, and luxury.
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