Chapter One
Cordelia isn't thinking about the sea breeze anymore. She isn't. She isn't.
It is more prudent to consider the gulls squawking overhead; why must they make such squawking sounds as they flutter together? Is it simply for the function of locating one another, and if so, does this mean they worry about collisions, and if so, could this possibly imply they rely more on sound than sight?
Annette might argue they simply do so because it is in their nature to do so, or, if she suspected Cordelia was considering the possibilities with too much effort, she would insist they do it because they experience joy. She'd suggest gulls experience a depth of emotion rivaling that of a person, and as such, that Cordelia must accept they are sentient.
She grins and removes her gloved hands from the railing of the ship, content in her evaluation of the gulls and eager to see what Annette would actually propose regarding their noise-making, when yet another frigid burst of sea air crashes through her face. Her hair tangles across her skin, itching some spots and tickling others, and she races to quickly redirect it away from her nose and mouth and eyes. Her smile evaporates, and feeling far less poised than a few moments prior she accepts defeat and retreats inside the deck to return to Annette.
That man in the corner is on his fourth cigarette in the last hour. Claude. He looks like a Claude.
Annette sits patiently inside the gallery of the steamboat, resting along the bench with a book lazily placed in her lap, closed. It's her favorite, the
Ballad of Lady Heartshall
, a riveting tale of a woman dressing as a man to fight in a battle for her country, though presently Annette seems more interested in watching the swells out the window. If the rocking of the ferry bothers her in any way, she doesn't show it, and while it had taken Cordelia the first two hours of the journey to steady herself Annette adapted almost immediately.
Those are Kingshead brand. Primarily manufactured in and around Hulvier and especially popular amongst members of the various rugby clubs.
"Miss Jones," Annette perks up as she approaches, her eyelashes batting quickly as though returning from a slight daze. Her face opens in a wide but pleasant grin, and for not the first time Cordelia admires the freckle that sits directly at the helm of her nose, which moves ever-so-slightly when her face does.
Shoulders are too narrow. Either he's a poor player or Claude's not on the team at all. Perhaps he smokes them to fit in.
"Annette," Cordelia lowers herself down to sit beside her, eyes occasionally flicking around the room.
"One almost could believe we'd be under attack at any moment with such frantic gazing," Annette remarks, resting her back against the wall of the ship, blocking out some of the window.
"Don't like boats," she huffs back.
"How were the gulls?"
"Loud. I think they might experience joy."
Annette laughs lightly, which settles something inside Cordelia. "Well, if gulls might feel joy, perhaps we should read them Shakespeare to see if they cry as well."
He just checked his pocket watch again. Even with three hours left in the journey he's agonizing over the return. Or arrival. Either.
"Have you ever been to Hulvier?"
"Up north?"
Cordelia shakes her head. "It's east."
"You always think it's east, but it isn't," Annette chirps. "If you must be technical I believe it's northeast, but no one would call it anything other than north."
"Regardless, have you ever been?"
"Not that I can recall," she shrugs. "The Sisters might have brought me there once on some holiday, but I remember nothing."
No wedding ring. Small box in his pocket? Proposal? He'll change his mind on the fourth cigarette halfway through.
"It's atrocious," Cordelia shifts to sit a little closer to her.
"Why do you ask?"
"Polite conversation."
Annette smirks once more, tilting her eyes up to meet Cordelia's and flashing a knowing look. "Is this about the man on his fifth cigarette?"
"Fourth," Cordelia complains.
"He gave up on the second one after a few puffs because the tobacco was stale, then quickly lit a third," Annette recounts. "You must have missed it."
"Claude's from Hulvier."
"I know." A pause, then a muttered: "He seemed more of a Henry to me."
"It's the brand of cigarettes, isn't it?"
Annette's eyes widen, either out of amusement or out of amazement. "You read the brand from this far away?"