I listen to the waves. I listen to the ocean. I listen to the gulls cry out over the water and look for anything in the water. Clams and mussels and refuse, all picked over and scavenged until it's all bleached clean. The noise flows through my mind and leavens nothing but picked bones. Clean white sands and clean white thoughts. Nothing, I am nothing, save of the lingering exhaustion that the morning slowly erodes.
Eliza shudders and shifts her grip on me. She is a good blanket. I mutter and shift my grip on Gawain. He does nothing, completely lost to his dreams. Good. I want stillness. I want quiet. I want the crash of the wake on the ice-cold sand. The noise weaves rime white threads in my mind. I think of songs and tunes it could hold watertight like a basket. There's something there, but I can't make it real without my strings. Those sit on the far wall, nice and snug and laid down to rest like a babe in the crib. Seen a lot, that poor thing. Bumps and bruises and waterlogged drownings and a handful of wounds. Poor thing needs care. Mutti probably has some oil and rags I could use. Get her nice and shiny and dark again. Tune up the strings and make her nice and tight. Too many thoughts. Too much thinking. Not enough calm quiet morning under a sea slowly growing more and more restless. I free my arm from a reap and let it rest in whatever I can that is comfortable. I try and dig a hole for my arm and can only really manage a little divot. It's still better, though.
Eliza snores and that's terrible. I am awake now. Gawain's not. Lucky him. He didn't have her mouth right next to his ear. My eyes are still closed, and I will not open them for anything ever. I am asleep. I will tell myself that until it is true again.
Mutti gets up too and I hear the house start to creak and groan around her. Too many things to do and she never gets a day off because that's just not in the cards. Her son is a lay about with no job and no wife. Her other son, though, is a much better person. Wife and a town and a nice shiny sheriff badge. Maybe even a few kids on the way. Who knows? Not the lazy son with a too small bed. My one free hand pulls our shared blanket up a bit. Eliza tends to kick and now I have to fix all her problems for her. She squeezes tighter and that makes me feel better. She is a very, very good cuddler, even if her size does most of the work for her.
A soft knock comes on my door and that's terrible. No more excuses and no more pretending.
"Don't say anything," whispers Gawain, "we're still asleep. She can't prove anything."
"I heard that Gawain," Mutti sighs, "Mom hearing."
He curses and I laugh. Eliza snores again and I think she's going to need an elbow to the ribs. She gets one and it only makes her hold tighter.
"Five more minutes," she mumbles. She gets a finger poking her cheek. That at least gets her eyes scrunched and angry. Improvement. Gawain starts wriggling.
"You have 3 minutes," Mutti sighs, "Can't believe I just said that. I was supposed to be the cool mom. But no, can't be cool anymore. Get your collective butts out of bed. I had a dream that I need to share with you."
That is a good enough reason to actually put forth some effort into all of this. And Eliza does take effort. Gawain gets free first and starts prodding. A finger to the cheek and that gets her angry and scrunched and irritable.
"You do that again and I will bite it off," she grumbles. He pokes again and Eliza does not keep her word.
"There are better ways to get me in the mood," she says, "I don't appreciate getting poked with it first thing in the morning."
"As much as I want that," I say, "Not what's going on. Strategy meeting apparently. Mutti had a dream and that means we have to listen to it."
"Thread dream," she yawns.
"Probably. Also, I'm getting a cramp in my leg, so I need to stretch it out."
She hums and doesn't like letting me go. But she does. She clambers over me because for some reason all of her can't wait a few minutes for me to get up.
I get to watch her back though. All of the muscles roll and pop and slot together. So much of her, so many of the looping lines. She goes wide, shoulders rolling and snapping, arms tense and tight. She takes her fingers wide and even that is a treat to behold. Then she bends over, and everything is beautiful. I can watch the muscle tear and flex as all the stillness is eased away. Her legs, long as the horizon, lead up to tight and toned and sculpted flesh that sets me racing. We have a deadline, though, and even my quickest can't beat that. And I don't want to be quick with her. I can't be quick with her. Her legs part a bit and she goes deeper. I watch the gap grow full with a devilish pair of eyes watching me gawk. I make no apologies. I have done nothing wrong. She smiles and rolls her eyes, like she had no idea what she was doing. It's perfectly natural to sleep naked and stretch languidly in full view of two men who have repeatedly and enthusiastically had carnality with her. Gawain pokes my cheek. I don't know how he avoided being mesmerized, but I imagine the threat of another scolding might be it.
I swing my legs off the bed and don't bother to hide anything either. Even when they both stare at me just as I stare at them. It goes away. I did miss my shirt. It gets cold in the mornings. I look to the sky from my window. Rain, it looks like rain. I don't really appreciate that.
---
Mutti busies herself with a good kettle and putting all that warmth in her new charges. She does make good tea. Always a secret that my sleuthing could never uncover. Gawain's trying now and I don't know if he can pull it off. It's floral and sweet and light. It chases away the morning chill and that's all it needs to do. Could go for some eggs and bacon, but that's not on the table, so I don't think it's coming. I could go out and see if I could catch a fish, but then I'd be cold again. I settle for the tea.
"So, we have a problem coming down," Mutti sighs as she sets the kettle down and joins us, "Claire says we have a fleet coming in off the shore and that's going to be an issue."
"We already knew that," I say, "And we figured they would come in force. So, we sit them down and have a chat and do what we can. Who's coming?"
"Soddal and that's all she got. Not with the fleet and coming in hot. Worst case scenario, we have a rouge element. Tried to get her to give me more, but she had nothing. And we were also doing other things, so I didn't really care to ask. And there's not really that much we can do."
The rain starts and that makes us jump. Terrible thing, the rain. Cold and icy and sharp. Good roof over our heads though, no drips or spatters. I think we should start a fire. We have enough wood and there's something to be said of having a strategy meeting with hot tea and a roaring fire. The rain hits the windows and I like it. Makes me want to go back to bed and never get up. Mutti eyes her guitar so lovingly nestled against the wall and looks to me. She's smiling and I can't think of a better way to pass the time.
I return from my little trip to see her already tuning the strings and getting everything set up. She has a small stage, Eliza sprawled out on the floor and Gawain eagerly perched atop her waiting for the show. I think he's putting it on a bit, but I appreciate the enthusiasm. Mutti lets out a low whistle when she seems my instrument.
"Jackalope," she sighs, "You really need to take better care of that thing."
"It still sounds fine," I shrug, "And now she has character. I almost drowned in a river once and now there's this nice echo to it. Maybe I'll light her on fire next and see what that does."
She shakes her head, snow white hair flowing after. Tight, simply braid, kind of how she's always worn it. I am a disappointment as all sons are and she knows it. She gestures to a spot at her side and lets it happen. Nothing can be done at this point. Really, it's my parents' fault. I had a terrible upbringing in a house full of love and laughter and trust. No one can turn out well in such a state. I need abuse and bitterness and neglect. It's the only way artists can grow.
I have the first turn and I take it slowly. The cold has done terrible things to my girl, but the motion is warming up everything. Slow and gentle, letting the constant snare of the rain drive the hurried pace. It's a tug of war, time slowly marching on with the dogged gnashing teeth of seconds trying to get it all going down the road faster. There is a storm coming and there is nothing we can do but wait it out and pray that the world is still standing in the aftermath. Sad, I think, in a way, but also freeing. The world is beyond the spin of our hands, and all we can do is take the motion and spin with it. Blowing the wind like an autumn leaf, dancing through the clouds and falling to the earth. There is a bit of a bite on the edge as the cold snaps back into place, but I think it adds a good level of texture. Can't all be a mournful bittersweet dance of numbing pain. Has to have some action, if only for the sake of variety.
A polite applause comes from all of my audience, and I don't know what I was expecting. Insanity, loss of control, a pair of small clothes thrown my way. That would have been nice. I bow my head.