No doubt her siblings found her decision to spend so much time with the woman who'd all but crushed her heart once suspicious, but Cassidy didn't really care. She liked spending time with Carly, even with the potential for future heartbreak looming over her head. No one could claim that she hadn't inherited the Stone stubbornness, and she was determined that they could be friends.
An exchange of information, that was on track with the excuse Cass kept feeding her twin when it came to constantly visiting the other woman. Certainly it had nothing to do with how comfortable it was to simply exist in the same space as Carly now that their awkwardness had subsided. There was nothing hinky going on here, despite what the occasional butterflies she felt might suggest.
It was cute how the other woman could switch into work mode so quickly, and admirable. Cass took a sip of water to hide the smile she knew had spread across her face as she watched the animated way Carly spoke. The other woman might not read the difference, as she often didn't seem to pick up on the cues that Cass was sure screamed more then friends, but she didn't want to test the theory anyways. "That'd be really nice, actually. We got some medical supplies this time, but I don't want to have to count on another drop." Especially not with other people fighting to steal all the supplies from them.
If there was a brief moment of disappointment over the other woman not protesting her leaving, well Cassidy squashed it down immediately. There definitely nothing appropriate that in the context of their new relationship. Setting her own glass down, she followed the other woman's actions. Even pushing her chair in, tucking her thumbs into her short pockets.
Just because she had to get heading back, to avoid making the walk in the dark, didn't mean she wanted to leave yet. "We could head out after breakfast? That way we've got as much daylight as possible to use?" Getting stuck in the jungle after dark really didn't hold any appeal to her; the nights in the treehouse had been more then enough. She lifted her shoulders in a slight shrug, "I can make any time work, though, if you've got work to finish up in the greenhouse or something."
Vaguely she could hear the first signs of a ruckus happening outside, but chalked it up to Carly's rowdier neighbors. She'd heard enough about the younger crowd (and Judah's) antics not to give it a second thought.