Lilia returned the next day. And the day after that.
Every afternoon, just as the sun began to dip and cast golden light across the studio's polished floor, she would slip through the doors with her sketchbook in hand and her heart fluttering like wings in her chest.
Celeste was always there -- already stretching or moving, as if her body couldn't sit still without music or momentum. And each day, she greeted Lilia the same way: a soft smirk, a tilt of her head, a look that said you came back for me.
Lilia wasn't sure when the air between them started to thicken. Maybe it had been thick from the start. But now, it felt charged -- with intense silence, with glances that lingered too long, with the unspoken truth that both of them were feeling something.
Celeste never posed, not really. She danced. She moved for herself, and for Lilia. And Lilia sketched feverishly, drinking in every motion, every shadow that curved across Celeste's skin. But more and more, her sketches were turning into something else -- not anatomy, not studies of form, but almost devotional. Her pages were filled with emotion expressed in charcoal and ink.
One evening, Lilia arrived to find the studio door already ajar. The light was dimmer, dusk spilling in through the high windows like honey. She stepped inside, expecting to hear music -- but the room was quiet.
Then she saw Celeste on the floor.
She was sitting up, leaning back on her hands, one ankle twisted beneath her, a wince of pain on her face. Her leotard clung to her body with a sheen of sweat. A water bottle had rolled across the floor.
"Celeste?" Lilia rushed forward, dropping her bag and crouching beside her.
"I'm fine," Celeste muttered, breathless. "Just landed wrong during a turn. Stupid mistake."
"Let me help," Lilia said, already reaching for her. Her hand grazed Celeste's bare arm -- warm, soft, trembling slightly.
"Help me to my room," Celeste said, her voice quieter now, almost vulnerable. "It's just across the quad."
Lilia helped her up, wrapping an arm gently around her waist, Celeste's weight leaning into her just enough to make Lilia's pulse pound. They moved slowly, carefully, across the empty campus. Neither of them said much, but both of them acutely felt the contact between their bodies.