"I think I've grown to love you, Magda. Not in the way you deserve, but in the best way I can. And I'd be yours, if you'll have me that is."
She isnāt sure what to say to that revelation, but itās certainly not the implication of silence. It hadnāt started out this way, it was never supposed to evolve into anything beyond the camaraderie they had, and yet there they both are, toeing a dangerously thin line between one and the other. Magda didnāt expect to say it. She thought they could just carry on in their own little way, warm and together but without labels and without that accursed word.
Love is the complication that neither of them need. Sheās been in love before, still is in love, in fact, with a rosy cheeked boy from Dusseldorf, but look where that love got her. Sheās still bleeding inwardly from the loss of that man, still sore and scarred from burying their child and watching him lay ruin to all concept of the word fidelity. Magda had vowed she wouldnāt love anyone else, sheād sworn it, in blood and sweat and tears, because she couldnāt suffer that agony again. But then there was Charles. Dear, sweet, obscenely stubborn Charles - and that called into question everything else.
He wasnāt perfect, but maybe that was part of the appeal. Sheād seen him at his worst and still sheād stayed. The anger, the frustration, the hurt and the fear. Sheād seen it all, but through that trauma she could see the little cracks in his cocoon, the wall he was hiding behind toppling down brick by brick. How many times had they just sat and talked? How many times had she tentatively coerced laughter from his lips and a wry sense of wit sheād thought was long since dead and buried? Sheād do anything to keep that smile on his face, to stop him from rebuilding that isolating barricade to keep everyone out.
Magda cares too much and that will be her downfall. Itās ridiculous to deny it isnāt it? To tell him that she doesnāt feel the same and walk away, when sheās almost certain the action would grind whateverās left of an already broken heart to dust. She canāt pretend that the touches havenāt been more frequent, that she hasnāt found reasons to spend time with him and revelled in the joy of careful proximity. Her embraces are near permanent, a kiss to his forehead often becoming one to the cheek and even on occasion the daring touch of his mouth.
āCharles Iā¦ā She has to speak, she canāt leave him hanging there without an answer, but the conflict of interest is gnawing at her. Her fingers subconsciously trace the ring on her finger, the ring she refuses to take off because to her it means something, itās more than a legal bond, but one of lifelong promises. Itās the hope for something that comes after the darkness, the comfort that serves as a reminder that once upon a time, somebody wanted her, that somebody loved her and didnāt think she was just another stain.
Maybe now she doesnāt need that reminder. Sheās got the tangible proof of such sentiments sitting right in front of her, but oh how it makes her heart ache. Magda doesnāt look at him for the longest moment, she just stays silent and still, processing it, trying to encapsulate what she feels and whether or not it constitutes a sin to move on. She hasnāt felt lonely for a second in the weeks theyāve spent together, hasnāt felt lost or surplus to any requirement. Sheās felt loved, first and foremost but more importantly sheās come to feel much the same way about Charles.
A caramel coloured hand reaches out for his own as she settles beside him, fingers lacing with that damnable piece of metal still intact. Sheās confused without a doubt, but thereās one very simple, undeniable truth in all of this. āKocham ciÄ.ā The words are quiet, uttered only in that soft little whisper as she turns her glassy eyes towards his face and tries so hard not to cry. Why couldnāt this be simple? Why did something so wonderful also have to hurt so much?
It hasnāt quite dawned on her that sheās allowed to love them both. That in two distinct ways, love evolves over time, it takes shape and changes. She can still care for Erik without being tied to him indefinitely, and she is more than free to love Charles, because there is no grand crime in love. āKocham ciÄ.ā She says it again, a little louder this time when sheās reaching for his cheeks, thumbs smoothing across unruly stubble when sheās creeping in closer.
Itās quiet and calm when she draws her forehead to his own, when her eyes are watering and sheās settling there nose to nose. Her hands are shaking, lips so close and yet so far as she sounds out that repetitive little mantra. āKocham ciÄ, Kocham ciÄ, Kocham ciÄ.ā