I just wanna go where I can get some space

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Mind my simple song, this ain't gonna work
Mind my wicked words and tipsy topsy smirk
I can't take this place, I can't take this place
I just wanna go where I can get some space
- Gooey // Glass Animals

Lucas doesn't know what to do with himself.

He still hasn't worked up the energy or motivation to unpack beyond what he needs, even after weeks of being in Antwerp. He's barely even worked up the motivation to get out of bed.

He's barely left the apartment, even after his two-week quarantine mostly in his room (during which he unpacked a few shirts and the white comforter that's strewn across his mattress, which lies on the floor next to a window), despite his father's demands that he get groceries. That was their first fight after Lucas moved in. Words had been thrown around the room. Lucas wishes he had thrown other things too. Anything that might just convince his father to send him back to Utrecht. Maybe some plates. Glass. But he figures that would probably just get his father's belt lashed at him.

When his father finally surrendered to letting Lucas stay home, he told him to unpack. And then told him that he isn't allowed to put anything on the walls. Not even with tape.

So Lucas has boxes and boxes filled with things he can do nothing with but look at. Photos he'd printed before moving specifically to put on his walls, that he now just thumbs through longingly, gazing at Kes and Jayden and Isa and Liv. He even has photos of Noah, whom he'd gotten closer to in the days before the move. Noah had given him a goodbye gift of a set of pencils accompanied with a wink and a hug later on that night. He'd told Lucas that he'd caught him doodling on a napkin at a get-together a few weeks before.

"You're pretty good," Noah had told him. "You could do it seriously."

"I do," Lucas had responded. "I just don't show anyone."

"Well maybe if you show more people, more people will get you new supplies."

Lucas had just made a face and allowed him a "Maybe."

The pencils are in the same box as all his sketchbooks, the ones he's started filling with drawings and doodles, and the ones that are completely blank, bought before he moved just in case he wouldn't be able to buy any after arriving. In the box, he also has watercolours and paints and an abundance of brushes, along with palette knives he's never used. The box is on the floor next to his door. He moved it from the top of a stack of boxes after needing to find his lined notebooks for school. And his clothes.

Anyway.

The photos.

He remembers when they were taken. He heard a lot of laughter that day. He had taken some before Kes had snatched his phone (freshly cleared of storage just for the occasion), and taken more than Lucas had bothered to count. Pictures of Lucas and Isa, Isa by herself, Lucas and Liv, Lucas and Janna, Lucas and Engel, Lucas and Noah, Lucas and Jayden, Lucas and Ralph, before he had begun taking photos of them not posing. Photos of them eating, laughing, talking, hugging. Them all existing.

They were beautiful.

Lucas had told Kes he could be a photographer. Kes had said he's never thought about it.

Then Lucas had taken his phone back and taken photos of Kes and the others until his storage ran out.

He printed each and every one of them.

He flips through them whenever he can, grinning and rolling his eyes at the photos of Jayden making a face and the photo of Noah flipping his middle finger to Kes with a flat face, smiling fondly at the photo of Liv and Isa hugging, Isa's cheek squished against Liv's, gazing longingly at the ones of them all together.

He sighs.

He supposes he feels lonely now. Of course, he's still been talking to them, chatting and giggling at the stupid videos and memes they send, but he hasn't seen or touched them since he moved. He thinks he misses that the most. Hugging, shaking hands, receiving cheek kisses from Isa and Janna and Ralph. Sitting on a sofa and immediately feeling someone's leg press against his, or lay over his lap. Feeling someone's head rest on his shoulder, someone's fingers mess with his curls. He misses when Isa would stand too close while talking to him, close enough for him to wrap his arms around her waist and hold her close while she speaks. He misses when Kes's thigh would press against his as they sat side-by-side, and when Jayden would greet him with a fist to his shoulder, or Ralph with a pinch on his cheek.

He hasn't touched anyone since moving. He doesn't think the accidental brushes against his father's shoulders as he storms past count.

He misses it, more so sometimes than others. Sometimes he misses it so badly he aches, pulling a pillow to his chest, or wrapping his arms around his legs, trying to feel some sort of contact, some sort of pressure. Sometimes he wonders if he'll forget what it feels like to touch other people. He, no one for that matter, doesn't know when it'll be completely safe to touch others, to hang out with them without covering their faces, to greet them with kisses on the cheek, the way Janna likes to. He doesn't even know if he'll have anyone he'll want to do those things with.

He doubts he'll find friends like Kes and Jayden, kind of doubts he'll find friends full stop.

It's not like he's going to have the opportunity to get to know anyone at school, as they're not even at school. And it's not like he really wants to make friends, anyway. He'll just leave Antwerp after high school, just have to say goodbye. The first chance he gets, he's leaving on a train back to Utrecht. He'll figure his life out from there.

But for now, this is what he has: a mattress on the floor. Blank walls. Towering cardboard boxes. A stash of cigarettes and weed hidden between his mattress and the wall. His skateboard propped up against a stack of boxes. His laptop sitting on top of a box, ready for when he finally starts school, which he's dreading.

Just more things to do.

More chores.

Everything feels like a chore lately. If he thinks about it, everything's felt like a chore for a while now. Instead of a to-do list, he has a fuck, I still have to do that list. It takes energy to roll out of bed. It takes commitment to wake up.

It's gotten worse since he got to Antwerp. Maybe, he thinks, because it's so much work to exist in the same place as his father, who blames him for every single thing the universe throws his way. But he also thinks it's because there's no one here to shake him out of it. Back home, he would get texts and texts from his friends, telling him to meet them at the skatepark, at a cafe, at some party. Giving him things to do.

Here, he still gets texts.

He answers them laying in bed.

He doesn't know how to explain it.

It feels like something is missing. Like there's an emptiness in him. It's easier to ignore when he's around other people, when he's listening to loud music and talking and laughing, or scrolling endlessly on social media. It's easier to pretend there's something there, on that empty shelf in his chest.

Sometimes it's sadness, he thinks. Especially since he moved. Sadness from missing home, missing people. But most of the time it's just... nothing.

And he can't really spend time with his friends, so he scrolls. Or draws or paints. But he hasn't been making much art beyond sketches lately.

Part of him hopes he might make some friends when school starts, at least some people to chat with, or hang out with when it's safe. But if he's completely honest with himself, he's not expecting to. He doesn't even remember how he became friends with most of the friends he has. Kes and Isa had, for lack of a better word, adopted him when they were younger, had taken him under their wings and shown him the ropes of existence.

Which feel like they're unravelling.

Lucas rolls over in bed, looking up at his laptop on the boxes, sighing. This is his life now. Boxes and the internet. The sound of his father tripping down the hall, grumbling to himself because Lucas isn't there to scold. (This is just about the only instance Lucas can think of when he hears his father's voice. The amount of words they've exchanged outside of their fights could usually be counted on two hands.) He'll finally hear some voices that don't belong to his father next week when he goes to class.

The thought of going back to school, even through video calls and online assignments, makes him itch. He's picked his lips red and raw in the past few days, without Isa to swat his hands away from his face before he can start tasting blood. When he lets his mind wander, his leg starts to bounce. His mom would set her hand on his knee, making it stop, and chuckle while telling him he's making her seasick. He doesn't even realise he's doing it.

He already has lots of emails from teachers; he checks every time he uses his laptop, but he hasn't responded to any of them. They all sound the same.

This is new to all of us
The school year looks very different this year
Thank you all for doing your best!
These are uncertain times
This digital landscape is difficult to navigate
This is a unique challenge
This could be an opportunity for you

All monotonous, inspiring voices of people waiting.

He doesn't know how the hell he's supposed to respond to any of them.

He tries to think that is really is something everyone is experiencing. That This is new to all of us and We're all doing what we can, but he feels like he's in it alone. He knows even Kes and the others aren't seeing each other in person, aren't hugging and hanging out the way Lucas longs to, but at least they're at home. Lucas is stuck in a box, and it feels like it's closing around him.

He sighs again, shutting his eyes. It's not quite dark yet, but he feels exhausted, even after doing nothing all day. He'll probably wake up in a few hours anyway. And he'll open his blinds, looking out at the city, just half-alive, just like him.

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