There is a warmth next to me and I slide next to it. It embraces me and I try to find even deeper recesses of said warmth. I don't find any, but more of it moves around me. That's nice. That's very nice. It can keep doing that if there are no secret places for me to nuzzle into. There are blankets around me and the warm and that's great. I don't want to leave the warmth, but there is a vague thought that I should get up and do something.
"Claire," says the broad warm thing that hugs me and kisses me, "It's time to get up. I have to repair the chicken coop today. We don't want foxes in there, do we?"
I hate the warmth now. I do not want to do as it tells me, but it's right. The storm a few days ago took that and part of the fence with it. We've been lucky so far, but there's a limit to luck and I'd rather not push it. To do all that though, I have to leave the warmth and that's terrible. The warmth kisses the crown of my head and I let it go away. I shouldn't. I should grasp it and clutch it and force it to stay with me, but it leaves me and that means I have to leave the bed too.
Amaru stretches in the morning light, black ink on blue skin melting into one another. He never told me where he got them. But I don't mind. They don't matter. Just like that scar on my shoulder. He doesn't need to know that and I don't need to know the ink. It is nice to look at though. It traces many, many, many fun places on his body, pooling underneath his navel in some symbol that has meaning to him but no one else. Well, and me. Usually, because I start kissing that before I take him in my mouth. It's a good place to kiss.
But I do the same, however reluctantly. The bed calls to me, telling me that it is too early to do anything at all. It's a liar, that bed, but damn it does tell me what I want to hear.
I stretch too, working some of the stiffness from my shoulder. I had to pound in stakes for the fence all yesterday afternoon. I'm not used to swinging a mallet, but I figured it out. It's not that hard, really.
I put on a simple dress that scratches at my skin. It's worth it. I'd rather have rough cotton than brambles and burrs poking and prodding. I yawn and move to start breakfast. We have bacon and bread and eggs and that seems like a good enough start to the day. I'll have to start another loaf soon, but chicken coop, chicken coop first. Then collect the eggs and feed the damn birds. Then I have to milk the cow while Amaru sees to the strawberries. Market day's soon and we need to be ready. Should be a good haul too and we might be able to get some honey and chocolate if the caravan doesn't run out.
I busy myself with cleaning up before I head out to join him, hiking my hem so I don't get mud on the thing. It doesn't feel quite right, like it's the first time I've worn the garment. That's insane. I wore this yesterday and the day before that and the day before that. But not before that. That was laundry day and I decided that Amaru deserved a treat so I did it naked. Mistake on my part. There were bug bites the size of cherries all across my back. But they don't itch anymore.
I hear Amaru pounding away as I lug the pail and the milk can to the barn. Heavy, but I don't remember them being this heavy.
"Claire," Amaru says, "What are you doing?"
"I'm going to milk the cow," I say, "What do you think?"
"Isn't that too heavy for you?"
I give him an odd look.
"I'm managing just fine, thank you."
"I can see that. But you usually have me do that. You always say that's too heavy for you."
It's fine. It's not that heavy. I can lug it all around the homestead probably. My shoulder doesn't feel quite right, but I can manage. It can manage picking stones and pulling teats, sure as Warren's got ears.
Annette moos when I walk in, trotting over to give me a lick. Always affectionate if a little reckless. We had to take down one of her horns so I wouldn't lose an eye. She doesn't seem to mind. If anything, it makes her look more right.
It's easy to milk her. She knows the routine down pat. I think we might start looking for a bull or something to breed her. Might be a good idea to get some calves to sell at some point, or another one to milk. We have the space for it. And there has been talk of getting some hogs as well. But that might mean we need to hire some help on and I don't know if we want to go that big. A conversation, that needs to be a conversation. That can happen later. Right now, I need to milk Annette and Amaru needs to finish fixing the coop before we start harvesting the berries to take the market. The work is never ending, but that's the point. It simple, so simple, so incredibly simple. The pail is full and Annette moos again, pushing her head against my back. Maybe she's trying to gore me.
She headbutts me out the door and Amaru is tending to the chickens. The coop's all finished now. Everything's safe. He must have worked up some heat, because he decided to take off his shirt. It was a good choice. The sweat traces the lines of the muscles, the lines of ink, rolling across his body like rivers down a mountain. My face flushes red and I keep looking. Even when he turns up and waves, I keep my head to his chest. Strong, broad, defined, the morning heat baked into his skin. There is a wonderful thought that says I could go over there and toss him to the ground, strip him naked and ride him until he breaks. Later though, I will have to do that later. I have to see to lunch right now. He must be working up an appetite, and I certainly could use something to eat.
---
The fireplace crackles and snaps while a covered bowl sits just off to the side. I'm going to have to get up early tomorrow to knead it. It will be rough and uneven. I never quite got the hand of baking. I've done it enough that I can be passable, but I always rush it. No matter. Amaru likes it. Swears it's the best bread he's ever had. Never mind that he always sneaks off to the bakery run by that girl to get some fresh loaves. It's just stuff we can't get here, that's all. Her perky demeanor and plump buns have nothing to do with it. Nothing at all. I'm not jealous about anything, despite the fact that his lap is under my head.
"You're really affectionate tonight," he says.
"Am I?" I say. I stare into the fires, the lapping tongues licking and touching the wood into curling fingers. There seems to be a pattern, repeated again and again and again, on a loop. I don't know if flames should do that. They might. They might not.