Elliot was still ruminating on how to hide Aliyah’s teeth. He had opened his mouth to tell her she could pretend she’d just broken up with someone. Or that she’d had a fight with her best friend. Something, anything, that would explain her sudden inability to smile. A dampened mood that made smiling impossible. Given her anxiety about the entire situation, it wouldn’t be hard, right? Regardless of how happy she could be to see her parents. Elliot knew that as much as he knew it was inadvisable to invite his mother to Harper Rock—or even to travel the long distance to Australia to visit her—he would be ecstatic to see her face again. Just one last time. Hell, he’d love to tell her everything so that they could visit each other whenever they liked.
That was the thought on his mind when he caught Pi’s glance out of the corner of his mind. It was like sunshine had started to creep out from behind dark clouds, thinking they could just… let them know. How much easier would that be? There’d be no reason to hide anything.
But, of course, there was Pi. Elliot’s chin tucked close to his chest and he didn’t turn to look at her. He didn’t catch that glance or return any kind of thoughtful expression. There were certain things that he and Pi would never fully agree on, and the wholesale slaughter of any human who ever knew anything about vampire-kind was one of them. Though, he wondered these days whether Pi’s views had changed, just a little. Whether or not she could be persuaded…
When he looked up at Aliyah, he saw her staring. As if hoping for a positive response. All Elliot could do was shrug, and in part agree with Pi. It was a hard question to answer if it had not already come to pass; it was something that probably didn’t bare thinking about, until it actually happened. He cleared his throat.
”I think that would depend on their reaction. Pi’s right. We can’t give an answer now without knowing the full extent of the consequences, if it were to happen,” he said. Elliot’s own mother, he thought, would probably be a bit surprised and a little afraid, at first, but he believed she’d probably accept it, in the end. And she’d do nothing about it. She’d move on. She’d joke about it, sooner or later. All of a sudden, he missed his mother. More than he had ever missed her before.
That was the thought on his mind when he caught Pi’s glance out of the corner of his mind. It was like sunshine had started to creep out from behind dark clouds, thinking they could just… let them know. How much easier would that be? There’d be no reason to hide anything.
But, of course, there was Pi. Elliot’s chin tucked close to his chest and he didn’t turn to look at her. He didn’t catch that glance or return any kind of thoughtful expression. There were certain things that he and Pi would never fully agree on, and the wholesale slaughter of any human who ever knew anything about vampire-kind was one of them. Though, he wondered these days whether Pi’s views had changed, just a little. Whether or not she could be persuaded…
When he looked up at Aliyah, he saw her staring. As if hoping for a positive response. All Elliot could do was shrug, and in part agree with Pi. It was a hard question to answer if it had not already come to pass; it was something that probably didn’t bare thinking about, until it actually happened. He cleared his throat.
”I think that would depend on their reaction. Pi’s right. We can’t give an answer now without knowing the full extent of the consequences, if it were to happen,” he said. Elliot’s own mother, he thought, would probably be a bit surprised and a little afraid, at first, but he believed she’d probably accept it, in the end. And she’d do nothing about it. She’d move on. She’d joke about it, sooner or later. All of a sudden, he missed his mother. More than he had ever missed her before.