by Kail D'Rea on June 18th, 2012, 1:09 am
The months Taithrosa had been gone had seemed both interminable and incredibly short. Kail was not, by nature, the type to do nothing or to mope around, so she had worked hard and kept herself busy, especially after he first left and she thought about him a lot. If she stopped working on the book in front of her, the scroll work on a special calligraphy project, or the plants in her garden before her, she was thought about how she missed the large blue man with his quiet, calm and thoughtful ways. She missed the way they talked about their days, about the past, about the future. She missed the way he held her close at night and made her feel safe all the time. At first it was painful, but after a while, she actually started to like to remember. She was adjusting; she was getting used to being alone and so better able to look at Taith’s time with pleasure.
This was especially true when she worked on something that required all of her attention, then stopped. One day she was doing one of the most complex copies she had ever done. It was an illuminated manuscript, hundreds of years old. The style was delicate and the workmanship extremely detailed. Colors varied from one dot to the next and each dot was precise. She had every tool out to make the first letter in the book an exact copy of the original. The letter was an a, but with the animals and flowers surrounding it it was almost hard to pick it out. With a writing brush no thicker than a single hair, she looked through the magnifying glass and placed the last highlight under the bottom curve of the letter. She stopped and sat back and then her most vivid memories of the recent month they spent together rose to the surface. Right then she could almost feel Taith’s arm around her waste and his voice in her ear, whispering all the things that made her happy. Telling her they would always be together. She smiled and leaned back to let the warm sunlight touch her face as she enjoyed a moment of untainted joy. Of course it slipped away soon and while she was alone again in her mind, Kail almost felt she had seen Taith again and that he would be home with her again soon. She wondered if this was how all Konti lived without the men they had loved. It could work.
Of course she didn’t have too much time to dwell on these things these days, as she was busy getting ready for the baby. Kail had no way to know if she would have a boy or girl, but in her own mind the baby was a little blond girl with Taith’s eyes. It was easy to imagine since all the babies here were girls and picturing raising a boy was almost beyond her.
So Kail busily got ready for her new addition. Her mother insisted that the baby would be happier if she lived in the water side of the town with Kail, her mother and her grandmother to take care of her for the first year. Kail saw no reason not to stay there until Taith returned, so she go things ready in the larger family home her mother and grandmother lived in on the water side of town. The baby could have her own nursery and the bed Kail and her sister had used. Because the possibly of a non-aquatic child was also possible, Kail took the precaution of finding a land-friendly bed and soft baby clothes and blankets she would need for the little one if she did need to stay in her own home with the baby. Her mother refused to consider the possibly and didn’t understand why Kail refused to have the baby at home. She thought it would be a Konti for sure, but if the baby turned out to be a boy, he would need to be born much closer to the surface and pure air that the home Kail was raised in. She had found a nice place right near the shore line in an old friend’s house to have the baby. She also contacted the Opal order and asked if they would send someone to help. This also upset her mother, but Kail simply wasn’t willing to risk her child and while her mother and grandmother would certainly be able to help with a Konti child, an Akalak child would be another story. She had had to stand firm on these points, so she was careful to give in on just about everything she didn’t feel affected safety. She didn’t even argue with her mother when she told Kail to stop looking for Taith to come back. She still waited, but didn’t talk to her mother about plans that involved him being there for the birth or the future at all.
Finally the time came when the baby was due any day. Kail stopped going in to work after the 10th day of summer and stayed in or near her mother’s home all day. She still went out for a swim, but she didn’t go to the landside anymore. There really was no reason. It hurt her to admit her mother was right and Taith would not be back for the birth, but she still couldn’t give up on him coming back at all. Kail still worked on her plans for their beautiful and simple beach wedding. Maybe in the Fall? She could hope, but she kept it to herself.
Mostly she just focused on the baby. On the morning of the 12th, Kail returned from a leisurely morning swim and sat near the window, watching the ever-changing colors of the sea and contemplating the familiar view from her childhood room. She wondered if her child would get to enjoy this underwater world, and truly hoped she would. Because she was watching, she saw her older sister swim toward the house. While she had been spending more and more time there, rather than at her own home, to help get ready for the birth of an already much-loved niece (or, her sister insisted much loved nephew), it was still unusual for her sister to come in the day while she should be at work. Kail went to the front entrance to meet her.
Tia was smiling and obviously excited, but as usual, would say things her own way. Kail’s older sister had always had a flare for the dramatic. “Hi Kail,” she said in a would-be casual way. “Feeling ready to have the baby today?”
“Hasn’t changed since you went to work a couple of hours ago. I still don’t think the baby is coming for a little while. Why? And why did you need to come home from work to ask?”
“Oh, nothing. Anyway I said I’d tell you after work, so I’m really just here for a break?”
“Tia, tell me what? Please don’t tease me today. I’m so bored and anxious all at the same time that if you have something to distract my mind, please do and I promise to, maybe let you hold the baby.” Kail said with a smile and a smirk. Tia was always teasing that she was going to hold the baby every second of the day and Kail was giving her a hard time back. Her family was so excited for the new addition, but her sister most of all. Tia smiled and replied “oh it’s distracting all right. That’s why I’m willing to break my word, just for you little sister and tell you earlier then this evening. Guess who came to see me today at the shop with a request?” Something in the way Tia said it made Kail heart stop. It seemed like an eternity as Tia dramatically paused before teasingly declaring “It was the man you claim to be your baby’s father.” She laughed and went on. “He went to your place to wait for you and I’ll help you… Kail wait for me you should have someone with you right now.” This last part was yelled after her sister back as Kail brushed by her and headed straight for the shore.
Of course Kail wasn’t moving fast enough at a year pregnant to out swim her sister, but she tried. As they reached the shore and started to walk through town, Tia tried to fix her hair and commented “You could have changed or something. A few more minutes wouldn’t hurt.” “Maybe not, but I don’t want to keep him waiting. Okay, I don’t want to wait. And you can come, but please, only to the house. Then Taith can look after me” The look on her face said Tia wasn’t so sure about that, but she promised to stay out of the way and Kail continued as fast as she could waddle to the little house on the outskirts she always called “our house.”