by Arrow on November 18th, 2011, 3:27 am
Within a short time, Trouble had a simple meal prepared. Fried mushrooms and wild celery to accompany a duck’s egg omelette, cheese, bread and apples. There was always ample beer on hand to wash their food down with. Arrow did not partake of the tasty offerings. In his nighttime form he neither ate nor drank. But he kept the girl and the cat, who was offered a plate on the floor, company. While she ate and chattered away, his mind was half on their rather one-sided conversation. The other half of his thoughts was on the subject of his treatise, and further arguments he wished to capture before they vanished like the smoke going up the flue. Trouble wasn’t put out in the least by either his abstinence from the food she had put together or his quiet manner. She was used to him, completely, and they had grown to know one another’s moods and habits and routines to an almost ridiculous level of predictability. Sometimes, Arrow thought his life was in a bit of a rut. Most of the time, though, he quite enjoyed the sense of stability he had found.
When dinner was over, Trouble cleared the table and Arrow returned to his writing. Done with her washing up, Trouble came and sat in the tattered arm chair, to stroke Cat who deigned to share her comfortable throne. The girl would sing or hum and sometimes talk more about anything that popped into her head. This night, she went on and on about a bright blue ribbon she had seen in a shop, and Arrow knew that she was asking for it without asking. If he had good luck with this batch of beer, he would see if he could afford to buy it for her. She really asked for so very little. After a while, Trouble began to yawn, and, predictably, asked for her bedtime story.
Smiling, Arrow put down his quill, stretched, rose and went to the chair. Trouble picked up Cat. Arrow sat. And the girl resettled herself in his lap, with Cat in hers. Always, it was the same. If he changed a word of it, she protested and corrected him. Like her name, he had told this story first, and ever since she wanted no other. She laid her cheek against his chest, and he told her of the beautiful princess, who was also a lovely swan. There was a handsome stranger, with horns and silver hair, who wooed the princess and married her. There was the birth of the beloved child, a daughter, who somehow hatched out of an egg, the mother being part swan. And then came the tragedy. An evil mage who coveted the princess for himself, the imprisonment of the horned father, and the abduction of the woebegone child. The mage turned the girl into a drab little bird, a sparrow, but she escaped and wandered about cold and lost. Miraculously (for the first time he told this story, Arrow had grown quite tired and gave it a quick ending), the handsome father found the little bird, all unknowing that it was his daughter, and brought her back to his lovely princess, who, being an astute mother, immediately recognized her. Their love worked its own magic, and wondrously, the bird turned back into a little girl. The three settled down to live a joyous life in fairy tale castle. A happy ending.
Trouble rested against him for a short while, then sat up, nodding. Yes, he had told it right this time. Her arms went around his neck and she kissed his opal shaded cheek, made her good nights, and went behind the curtain to remove her clothes and shift. Preferring her bird form when it came to sleeping (which Arrow felt was a ruse so that he could have the use of the bed and the blanket), she would shift and then come fluttering back out, to perch on his right horn, much to the cat’s intense interest. Arrow returned to his writing, and a peaceful silence descended upon the little household. Long into the night he would work, energized by his father, shining above even if he could not see through the roof of the house. Pale moonlight would find its way in through one of the tiny windows, and that was enough.
At some point, the Ethaefal put down his quill and rubbed his eyes. Rising, he plucked Trouble from his horn and settled her gently in a nest she had constructed for herself on the shelf above the desk, at a height safely out of reach of Cat. Retiring behind the curtain, he undressed, stretched out on the narrow bed, and tucked his arm under his head on the flat pillow. Turning to gaze out of the other window, which was above his head, his mind’s eye saw his father shining above, though the intervening rooftops actually blocked him from view. Sometimes, the ever shifting buildings of Alvadas would allow him to catch a real glimpse of Leth, but not on this night. A building he had never seen before in all the years he had been in the city was now standing shoulder to shoulder with his tiny cottage. Unfazed, Arrow smiled up at the small square of night sky, comforted just in the knowledge that Leth was still up there, watching over him. He was sure of this. He felt it.