16th Day of Spring, 510 AV
Nel, despite the harsh realities of living a life at sea, was kind of a spoiled brat. Syon had done his best to make up for the first two decades of her existence, and so she'd wanted for nothing aboard the Bright-Eyed Mariner. Never went hungry, always had shoes and clothes and a story before bed. And he'd shared a cot with her so she didn't have to sleep in the hammocks every night. The cot was small but so was she, and they'd figured out a kind of tangled arrangement whereby her feet always stayed warm, and his arms always stayed about her, and eventually she couldn't sleep without that sense of security, of being held onto so she wouldn't just drift away.
She'd started out on the floor, like she said she would. After Murdoch had left, she'd locked the door like he told her to, and then she'd taken a bath. Crawled into the oversized chemise she used as a nightgown and curled up on the floor by the hearth, under her traveling blanket. She'd managed to stay there for at least an hour, before she started shivering. Reluctantly -- almost guiltily -- she'd given up and crept into his empty bed, and from there, within minutes, she was asleep.
When he came home, there was fresh water in the pale and she'd stirred the fire into a dull, homey glow. Her things were tucked neatly by his rudimentary bookshelf so that everything remained as clean and orderly as he seemed to prefer. There was food, in case he wanted it, too. Because Nel didn't know how to share space without sharing everything else; she was used to having to share with at least a dozen men, almost everything.
Out of all the black, and sprawled across the cot as she was, it wasn't a wonder that Syon had taught her to dress as she did. Long white limbs, the same climbing pattern of silvery scales wound about her legs from the tops of her toes, and the one arm slung across her face. Seashells and beads and braids a-spill across the pillow. With her head tilted to the side, one could more clearly discern the mark on the side of her throat -- like a tattoo, but with mercury instead of ink, a whirl of silver in a tiny, intricate design. Divine.
She didn't wake up when he came in, must have been exhausted. No sounds at all, just shallow breathing that seemed to sigh from more than just her nose, though what that meant was anyone's guess. She looked peaceful though, and one had to wonder just what sort of dreams carried her away. Whether they were portentous or not; if they were, could she even recognize it.