She glared at him.
She stared at him in an unkind, and rather, dark manner.
Her eyes became deep, like you could engoulf yourself into them, an unendless pool.
Her eyebrows tensiflied...close to becoming a rounded 'v' shape.
Her mouth however...was straight with lips of Apathy.
She didn't quiver.
She didn't shake.
She was stern.
They were in a hallway with no one else around...alone.
Behind them was a large window about seven feet tall and three feet wide and beside the window, was a wooden door. The door led to the baseball and track feild, surrounded in the mist of the summer breeze.
"You know exactly what I could do right now."
She was strong and confident, standing ground.
He was lying against the brick wall. Unlike her, he was terrified.
He shook.
"Please don't hurt me!"
With those words, power was felt. The power a king has looking down on a common peasant, begging for mercy, at the base of his throne.
There was no verbal response to his remark. Rather, the response he was given was her foot lifted into the air above his waist, with not much of a hesitation.
With his back against the cold wall, and his legs cross-legged, he squeezed his eyes shut and his fist clenched tight with his knuckles bulging. The round creases between his eyebrows, touching.
Then, there was a pause, and a wait.
His body began to relax, his fist coming undone with his hand on the rough floor.
He finally opened his eyes ever-so slowly.
He saw her standing there, looking down.
She was relaxed as well with her hair in-front of her face. She looked at him, her hair moving away from her face and said, "I'm not a horrible person." She still did not smile, but she wasn't angry either. She was solemn.
"I could have hurt you physically, but then I would have to face the consequences of your parents, and you would no longer be able to have children. Ever. You would probably bleed to death, with what I thought about doing, and I would have to find out what I would say to the adviser about you."
She stood there, seeming to be frozen.
He eased even more and stood up, laughing to himself with an arrogant confidence and walked away.
She later left the hallway a few minutes later. With a smile, she acted as if nothing had happened.