Open Sunshine and Stormclouds

Teddy Pirrip

Walking the line, most of the time 🧸
 
Messages
930
OOC First Name
Verity
Blood Status
Half Blood
Relationship Status
Single
Sexual Orientation
Closet gay
Open after Sarah posts with @Lucy Montague

Teddy woke up this morning feeling inexplicably fantastic. Running his fingers through his hair, he noticed his hair had settled into perfect tousled waves without any effort. Grinning at his reflection, he grabbed his robes and made his way down to breakfast. On the way, every staircase along the way aligned perfectly, creating a smooth and uninterrupted descent to the Great Hall.

As he approached the Gryffindor table, his attention was drawn to the Ravenclaw table where Lucy sat, looking not quite herself. Deciding she might need a bit of cheering up, Teddy veered off course and headed her way instead. "Morning, Lucy!" he said brightly, sliding into the bench across from her and hoping to share some of his cheeriness. "You okay? You look a bit..." He trailed off as didn't quite have the right words to describe how she looked.
 
Lucy was far from her best self. Usually she could put up a front, give people the Lucy she knew they wanted. But not today. It felt like everything had caught up with her, from the very moment she had woken up. Probably just a bad day, she tried to tell herself as she got ready. But it hung heavier on her than usual, almost like a physical weight in her chest pulling her down. She had to shake this off, she thought. People didn't want sad Lucy. They wanted happy, go-lucky Lucy. She knew this.

She managed to make it to the Ravenclaw table without much hassle. No one bothered her, or asked what was wrong (god forbid). If everything could continue that way -

Lucy was jolted from her thoughts when Teddy greeted her, looking perfectly happy. She wasn't a resentful person, but she resented him in that moment. She tried to perk up, giving him a smile that didn't quite meet her eyes. "I'm fine," she said, a little tersely. "Just...not having the best day." She hoped he'd leave it there. She really, really did.
 
Teddy, oblivious to the depth of Lucy's struggle, started picking a couple of slices of toast from the offering in front of him and leaned in with his usual enthusiasm. "It's just a bad day, not a bad life. Right?" he said, his voice full of misplaced cheer as he spread butter on the toast. "Everyone has days like this. Just think about something that makes you happy."

He smiled broadly, clearly thinking he'd just offered the perfect pep talk this morning. He filled the toast with bacon and ketchup and took a huge bite, then added with his mouth full of bacon, "Like, imagine Quidditch. That always perks me up."
 
Lucy watched Teddy, half-wishing he'd be quiet, half-wishing he'd just go away. No, she liked Teddy, she shouldn't think like that. But she couldn't help it. His relentless cheer wasn't infectious, it was irritating. "I suppose," she said non-committally, but felt a stab of annoyance at the idea of just think of something happy. Like that was going to make a difference. Her hand clenched under the table. "I'm glad that works for you," she said somewhat stiffly. "But maybe that doesn't quite work for everyone." She was trying to be polite.
 
Teddy noticed that Lucy wasn’t her usual bubbly self but otherwise she seemed polite enough that he didn't feel unwelcome or as if he should slip back to the Gryffindor table any time soon. She appeared no different from the other times he'd found her glum and managed to cheer her up, and he was confident that he could do it again. He didn't immediately reply to her while he chewing his bacon sandwich and plotting his next move. Then he asked, "What's the matter anyway? Have you and Audrey had a fight?" That would explain her absence this morning and Lucy's bad mood.
 
Lucy sighed, deflating slightly. "No, Audrey and I aren't fighting," she said in a somewhat snappish tone. "Not that it's any of your business if we were," she added lowly, almost too low to be heard. She hadn't meant to say that - it had just come out. She didn't quite regret it either. Lucy was finding Teddy's company irksome and was starting to actively wonder the best way to get rid of him - consequences be damned. It was a dangerous way to think but Lucy was approaching her wit's end. It was just a bad day - she thought to herself, trying to calm herself - and she'd get through it. But it didn't feel like it.
 

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