"A floating home..." Wrenmae murmured, "Like a wagon but with no roads, only currents." It felt right to say, to think of the sea as a collection of invisible roads that connected all shores. Was that it then? Laviku only paved the sea in glass to create another way to travel? What if some currents ran to no shore, but only to the center of the sea? What if some currents reunited one with earth in a different way, tearing them beneath the waves to touch the cold, muddy bottom.
It was hard to imagine.
"How big IS your family?" Again, another question to fill a silence that needed no interruption. The ocean hugged them, embraced them with all the gentle insistence of a mother, reminding yet distant. The waves sloshed only briefly over the float, spreading salty pray across Wrenmae's face. He sputtered sideways, gagging on the taste, coughing and looking back, embarrassed. Red seemed to have spooled in his cheeks, widening across his face like a soft blaze.
They were close and he was in love, the grateful sort that accompanied the recently saved. It was not a hard face to love, full of vibrant purpose and mischievous personality...deeper still was a resonate wisdom far greater than her age would suggest.
He wondered briefly if she were a god.
On his skin, her fingers tapped into wells of sensation, deeply hidden by the cool water across them. Ants crawled beneath his skin, worming warmth across his arm and up to his shoulder, pushing the blush in his cheeks till they threatened to burn the water around them.
"What kind of magic?" he asked suddenly, kicking suddenly and viciously beneath himself to raise him farther over the float. Although the shore loomed, he could not feel the bottom with his feet and the idea of such a height, even floating, was uncomfortable.
"I can...change, I guess, morphing is what it's called." he talked to fill the silence, unsure if he erred, "Not that I don't like what you did...erm, I just...well." He was quiet a moment, eyes closed.
"It doesn't bother me that you know magic," he said at last, "I think that makes you more alluring."
He felt he could speak frankly here, just the two of them and the sea. The ocean, after all, only spoke in rises and falls of water, muttering secrets in the tide that none could understand. If they were alone, he could speak.
He had nothing to lose...at least nothing more than if she had not opted to dredge him from the depths.
She saved his life, and honesty was the least of a pittance he could offer her.