lila's gaze softened as ophelia spoke – maybe it was the quiet panic in her voice, or maybe it was just the familiarity of someone else unravelling under the academic pressure. either way, something in her chest eased a little. misery didn't just love company; it needed it sometimes. she nudged a stack of articles aside, creating space at the table like it was instinct. “then sit,” she said, voice low but laced with amusement. “come suffer beside me.” her fingers curled loosely around her highlighter as she studied ophelia a beat longer. the girl looked like she felt – tired, wound up, running on caffeine and expectations. it was weirdly comforting. “shark finning, though,” she added after a moment. “that's heavy. important, but… brutal. no wonder your brain tapped out.” lila reached for her cold coffee, took a sip like it might spark some genius, then made a face. disgusting. “we should, probably both be drinking water and going to therapy instead of this, but, you know. capitalism.” she passed a few color-coded pages toward ophelia, her own notes scrawled in sharp, decisive handwriting. “here, i covered the regulatory failures from 2008 onward. you might be able to pull something from it for your angle, too. ecosystem collapse doesn't like to stay in its lane.” then, more gently. “you're not behind. you're human. big difference.”
an academic weapon. that's what her teachers in high school always called her. she was bright, top of her class, always. so why was it so hard to put words to paper. she would be writing her thesis soon to graduate and yet she couldn't even get through a ten page research paper. ophelia wasn't at risk for failing or anything but she held herself to much higher standards than this. that's how the girl found herself sat in langley for going on five hours now... five hours of little to no progress. her eyes dart around the library hoping for a bit of a distraction that would ideally get her back in the right mindset to grind this paper out. chocolate hues fell on the familiar face not far from her own work set up, "lila, hey" she sighed in relief, "shit. i totally spaced on the climate policy paper. i've been trying to get anything into this document for my conservation class, sharking fining and its survival impact on immediate dependent ecosystems. " ophelia groaned at the realization that an entire paper slipped her mind. "i've had such bad brain fog recently so absolutely, swap notes, mutual rage, i'm down for it all at this point. i need to get my mind going back down the right path."
status : — closed for @delicateghvsts (brody)
location : — the brew house
lila stared down at the three bins like they were suspects in a lineup. blue. green. black. each one carefully labelled, color-coded, and adorned with laminated pictures she'd spent an embarrassing amount of time designing in canva. she even taped an actual banana peel to the green one for visual reinforcement. if brody didn't get it this time, she was going to lose her mind – or worse, her will to recycle. “okay, brody,” she said, tapping the green bin with her shoe. “let's say, hypothetically, you've finished your smoothie and you're holding a cup with the little leafy symbol on it. where does it go?” she waits for a beat, before continuing. “green,” she answered for him, before he could point to the black and break her spirit. “green, brody. because it breaks down. compostable. like food. plants. things that come from the earth and don't have barcodes.” she gestured to the bins again with the flair of a game show hostess running out of patience. “blue is for paper. clean paper. not paper with cheese melted into it. and black is for all the sad, unrecyclable garbage we pretend doesn't exist.” her eyes narrowed as she unwrapped a muffin and immediately crumpled the wrapper in her palm. “don't you dare say green,” she warned, voice low and dangerous. “if you say green, i swear i will dump this entire bin on your bed.”
lila startles at the sound of ava's voice, her eyes lifting from the rippling surface of the pond to meet the girl she hasn't properly spoken to since before everything unraveled. her posture stiffens instinctively, but there's no edge in her voice when she speaks – just a quiet sort of guilt that's lingered ever since lizzie's name became something they don't say out loud anymore. “ava, wait,” lila says, rising slowly from the bench. the soft morning light catches on the tired lines under her eyes, evidence she hasn't been sleeping much either. “you don't have to go. it's a public bench. you probably have more of a claim to it than i do.” she swallows, the words tasting heavier than she wants them to. “i didn't know you came out here. not until after.” a beat. “i'm not here to start anything, i swear. i just… couldn't sleep either.” there's a pause, where she glances down at her hands like she's bracing herself. “i never got to say i'm sorry. not just for what happened. for – everything. for what i did. for what i let happen.” her voice cracks slightly, but she forces a soft breath out and looks up again. “you don't owe me anything, ava. i just… i'm sorry.”
status : — closed for @xfwildflower
location : — the reflection pond
Dawn has only just begun to crack the night sky open when Ava makes her way to her favourite bench at the reflection pond. Another night of staring at the ceiling with a whirring brain has led her here - if she’s plagued to be an insomniac for the rest of her college days, she may as well make it scenic. Everything feels different in the dull glow of the rising morning - softer somehow in the quiet hours before the rest of the campus wakes up. A serenity the brunette is actually looking forward to bathing in when she rounds the small bend of shrubs and finds someone already there. “ Oh, ” Ava murmurs quietly, halting her stride. The night’s weariness seems to catch up to her in that moment when she recognises the frame, and with it all the uncomfortable messes Lizzie had made with them. “ I didn’t think anyone else would be out this early, sorry. I’ll go. ”
lila rae brooks ──── twenty3, environmental studies, junior.
❀ ABOUT ❀ MUSINGS ❀ VISAGE ❀ PINTEREST ❀ THREADS
status : — closed for @opheliabinici
location : — the langley library
lila wasn't usually one for silence. not the kind that settled between bookcases, humming with fluorescent light and dust motes. but langley library had a way of stilling her – of quieting the chaos that usually lived just behind her ribs. and today, she needed that more than she cared to admit. she sat cross-legged at a corner table, surrounded by the organized mess of open books, sticky notes, and a hulf-drunk coffee that had long gone cold. her laptop was open but ignored, the screen dimmed to black. instead, she was thumbing through a worn copy of this changes everything, underlining with more pressure than necessary. her jaw tightened as she read another passage that pissed her off – in a good way, in a this should make everyone angry way. she let out a short breath, sat back, and rubbed at her temple. “jesus,” she muttered under her breath, barely loud enough for anyone to hear. except someone did. lila looked up, brows lifting as her eyes caught a familiar figure a few tables over. ophelia. her hand hovered in a pause before waving. “hey,” she said quietly, then gestured at the chaos in front of her. “guess we're both gluttons for punishment.” a small smile tugged at the corner of her mouth – rare, but genuine. “i'm digging through all this for my climate policy paper. you too, or are you just here for the vibes?” she let her pen fall against the table with a soft clatter, then tilted her head. “i've gotta say… it's kind nice. knowing someone else here actually gives a shit.” her voice dropped slightly, more vulnerable than usual. “gets a little lonely, y'know?” lila shrugged it off quickly, already shifting back into something lighter. “anyway, if you wanna join forces – compare notes, or rage about fossil fuel subsidies – i'm not going anywhere for a while.”
status : — closed for @dvrkhallways (thajun)
location : — prism
the prism was loud in all the ways lila needed it to be. bass heavy enough to rattle her thoughts loose, lights strobing fast enough to blur the edges of memory. she didn't come her often anymore – too many ghosts lurking between the barstools and booths – but something about tonight had pulled her in. she wasn't dressed to impress. black cropped tank, her old docs, a silver chain tangled twice around her throat. just enough to belong. not enough to be looked at. she'd perfected that balance ages ago. her palms were still a little clammy from the cold outside, fingers wrapped around a sweating glass she hadn't touched in ten minutes. she hadn't planned on seeing anyone. definitely not him. “tahj?” her voice rose above the music as she stepped into his line of sight, more uncertain than she'd like to admit. she didn't expect him to smile. maybe didn't deserve one. they hadn't spoken since that night. the one where she'd texted him be there soon and then never showed. no warning, no explanation. just silence. “i wasn't stalking you, if that's what you're thinking,” she said, offering a crooked half-smile. “i just… ended up here.” a beat passed. “i should've texted. after. i just didn't know what to say that wouldn't make things worse.” she took a shallow breath, tugging her sleeve down over the heel of her hand. “i know i ghosted. i know i probably messed that night up for you. but i didn't plan on blowing you off. something came up. and i should've said that. you didn't deserve the radio silence.” her eyes lifted to meet his, open and steady. “you were my friend. still are, if you want to be. that's why i'm saying this now.” she glanced towards the bar, then back at him. “you want a drink? my treat. consider it a very, very late apology.”
lila looked down at the flyer like it might bite her. it had stopped right against her sandal, edges crumpled, half-smeared ink still catching in the light. her brows lifted as she reached to pick it up, fingers brushing paper that still radiated heat from november's fury. of course it was her. no one else moved like a weapon. “hey nova,” lila said, voice warm but careful, like she was approaching a spooked animal. her grip tightened slightly. “you know, one day you're gonna throw something and actually start a fire.” she glanced up, studying the way november's jaw set like a trap. it made lila ache a little, in the soft spot that she always reserved for people who held in too much. “you okay?” she asked, gently, but she didn't wait for an answer. she offered the paper out like a peace offering. “here. i won't read it if you don't want me to,” she mused with a small, crooked smile. “but if you're starting a collection, i can help. i've got like, five in my backpack already.” she tilted her head. “we could make a collage. or… set them on fire. your call.”
who? open, capped at 0/3. where? the montclair quad.
the anonymous campus menace must think they're real clever, and as a woman who much prefers to keep her own life personal, november finds their larking particularly irritating. her already barely-concealed rage simmers every time she walks past those goddamn flyers. they're everywhere, and she's already seen a few this morning. day ruined. the next one she spots quickly becomes the target of her fury—it's taped to a lamp post, and she tears it down without breaking her stride, crumples it in her fist without bothering to read past the first line. the quad itself is deceptively peaceful, and the brunette marches straight through it, a storm cloud veering towards the nearest trash can, the paper remains still clutched in hand. hand winds up like she's about to throw it hard; nova narrows her gaze like she's lining up the shot. the balled-up flyer arcs wide, hits the pavement, rolls for one, two, three seconds . . . and hits someone's foot. "fuck," she hisses under her breath before stalking a few paces closer, voice louder this time. "sorry. bad aim." a tilt of her head at the paper, then: "well? you gonna toss it out, or hand it over so i can?"