Jillian couldn't seem to tear her shiny green eyes away from the cheap snow globe with the lit-up blue jellyfish inside. Funny thing was, the reason she couldn't shift her eyes came from the same reason they were shiny with tears that were threatening to fall. Hell, no
threaten
about it... they were coming, and coming soon.
A sigh, then a deep, regretful mutter finally broke the silence of too many minutes. "Jelly..."
That did it.
At hearing the nickname from him that she'd tried to quash years before, a sob escaped Jillian's lips before she sealed them shut, but that was more than enough to humiliate her, and she reached out to snatch up the snow globe with both hands and clutch it to her chest. "...can I take this back?"
She still wouldn't look at Bash, but she could see his face anyway; it wasn't hard to fill in the blanks with the avalanche of memories available to her after a dozen years. His pale blue eyes were crinkled at the corners because he was frustrated... that one line across his forehead would appear because he was concerned... the left side of his mouth was up higher than the right because he was about to...
"Possession is nine-tenths of the law, but the law one."
...say something so goofy that it would force her to stop getting all worked up and try to figure out what the hell it even meant. Well, not this time. "I gave it to you after that class trip, so if you're going to get me expelled, or whatever, then I want to keep it." There, that was enough. Jillian had no desire to explain why she wanted to keep the dumb tchotchke and embarrass herself even more. He was just a guidance counselor, not her...
He was just a guidance counsellor. Dammit.
"Jelly... sorry. Miss Drevin. Why on the planet would you think you're going to be expelled?" When she didn't answer, he stood to his full six-foot height and took a few steps, but only a few. "Is it because you got caught with some weed?" Another couple steps. "Is it because you pushed that girl in the hallway last week?" Closer... closer... "Or is it because you called Principal Kowalski a... what was it? Rancid cunt?"
Jillian hugged the snow globe tighter before she answered. It was all she could think to do. "All of the above. I... it all came out, I guess. Right? It's too much to ignore... right? Even you can't smooth this--"
It was the big mitt coming down on her shoulder and squeezing that shut her up even before Bash began answering his own questions. "Jelly..." No more
Miss Drevin
, apparently. "...we don't expel for an ounce of weed. If we did, the five kids we have left would get pretty lonely." He chuckled at himself then, and it was all she could do not to reflexively respond in kind. "And at least a dozen other students saw Kristy Park try to hip-check you into the wall before you turned the tables on her." He paused for dramatic effect then. "And Principal Kowalski
is
a rancid cunt... though that one you probably should have kept under your hat." He sighed then, but gave her shoulder one more squeeze before he went back to his chair. "So... a week's suspension." He held out a very official-looking slip of paper, waving it under her downcast eyes.
Jillian finally looked up then and stared at him. Like every other time, she guessed she could see why most the girls in their K-12 academy had crushes on him; the thick, dark hair, the bronze eyes, the muscles, the chin... whatever. To her, though, he was just... Bash. He was the big guy behind that scuffed and dinged desk ever since
forever
. She could still remember laughing at one of his bad puns during orientation on her first day of school when she was six. The kaleidoscope of memories of sitting right in this spot more times than she could possibly count didn't include a single second of mooning after him like some flighty little girl. He was more than that. Better than that.
He was the light at the end of a dark tunnel that stretched for miles, and she couldn't deny it, no matter how guilty she felt. No matter how many times she tried to convince herself that he was
just
a guidance counsellor.
"A week's..." She just shook her head. "Bash, how the hell? I went fucking nuts!"
"Language." He snorted. "And you don't know what going nuts even looks like. Trust me." He tapped the cleft in his chin then. "Sorry, Jelly, but you're going to have to try harder to find an excuse why you can't go to any of those colleges you got accepted to." Bash gave a rolling, exaggerated shrug of his wide shoulders. "In fact, I'm thinking that maybe there
isn't
one... and you'll just have to get an education and a future and all that."
Jillian glanced away guiltily.
Shit, am I that obvious?
After a second she sighed, then nearly grinned before she caught herself. No, no she wasn't. No one else seemed to catch on, just Bash. Just the man who'd never stopped holding her hand for the last twelve years. Of course
he'd
seen right through her.
That dumb smile came back again.
"We can't pay for it." Jillian shook her head. "It's easier if I give them an excuse."
Bash snorted. "Did you forget what year it is? No one can pay for college."
Jillian rolled her eyes. "Okay... but who wants to be in debt forever?"
Bash snorted. Again. He did that a lot. "Don't be a social art philosophy history major." He tapped a file on his desk that she knew was hers. "We both know you have options."
I don't want to leave you behind.
Nope. Not in a million years could Jillian say something so cringingly childish out loud. Instead, she settled for second place, which was its own kind of depressing. "My mom and dad... they kinda need me around. Kinda
really
need me around. Maybe they could... I dunno... talk to you?"
Weirdly, that did make Bash pause. His silence was so unusual that Jillian actually frowned in confusion, ready to say something. The counsellor took a deep breath then and shook his head. "Jelly, you can't worry about... about them. Their mistakes..." He came back around and put his hand on her shoulder again. "You have to do what's best for yourself." He grinned. "The rest will work itself out. No one needs me to make that happen."
Jillian could almost believe him if it wasn't for the fakest smile she'd ever seen.
What the hell is that about?
She didn't like it. It was almost like he was lying to her, and he never lied to her. She knew it. "Bash?" She blinked. What could she say?
'What are you hiding from me?'
What was the answer... that everything
wouldn't
work out? Jillian was suddenly lost. "Is... is everything okay?" It was the best she had right then.
Bash saw her unease, and at least it made that false grin disappear. "Jelly... I guess..." He sighed, and sighed big. "I'm gonna miss you. You're... special. I really mean that."
Jillian froze, and one memory came crashing home; the day she'd shown up to second grade after having begged--thrown a fit, really--her parents to let her dye her hair a vivid, neon green. She'd thought it'd make her look so magical, so... special. The other kids had been merciless, of course; kids were nothing if not cruel little monsters. But the most disheartening was the side-eyes she got from the faculty too; like she was one of
those
kinds of kids. The pigeon-holing began in earnest.
"Mint Jelly."
Those two words, though she hadn't known it then, were a rope thrown into her pit. Bash saw her in the hall and made his declaration out of the blue, accompanied by a very pleased and self-amused grin. When Jillian had just scrunched up her brows in confusion, he'd flicked the tip of her hair. "Looks like mint jelly. I love mint jelly... Jillian. Heh."
"Th... thank-you." It'd been all she could say.
"You're as welcome as you are lovely, young lady." He'd hesitated then. "You know... I like marmalade too. It's a kind of jelly." His eyes danced when he winked at her, then went on his way.
It took about a month before she showed up looking like an orange. From then on, through every exotic dye-job of her naturally golden hair, she was Jelly, and Bash was her biggest cheerleader. Hell, he'd even intervened on her behalf to get an exception for hair and a few other things into the uniform rules. Everyone still had to wear the lame outfits, but after what Bash and Jelly got done, the students could at least be somewhat expressive. That went a long way towards her making some real friends.
It'd been rough to see the disappointed look on his face when, in tenth grade, she said that the nickname was too cutesy. Of course, looking back, her case was a bit undercut having come from behind some nice, strawberry-red tresses. Still, Bash had immediately adjusted himself and set about treating her like a proper grown-up.
Until today. Until right then. Until his sudden melancholy.
Until he called her special.
Now she
wanted
to be Jelly again, and for the rest of her life.
Face burning, Jillian shot to her feet, dislodging the strong, comforting fingers on her shoulder. "Gotta go!" She swiped at her eyes before she turned away. "I'm already... it's late... mom'll wonder..." Not true and didn't matter. She had to leave. Needed to.