"I do." Obviously. And her answer is obvious as well, and in the dark, Darras smiles. "I'm laying here thinking, there's no where else I like more than being right here, just like this, in this place, with you. Not even the sea compares to it, not anymore. And that's partly what makes me believe in it. How is it that we'd end up here, after everything, if not for it."
"Luck." Yseult stretches against his side, reaching toward the footboard with toes and then curling back in, ankle hooked over his. She's pressing a smile against his chest. "You're terribly lucky, remember? I'm just another dolphin."
"But you're much better than a dolphin, darling, don't sell yourself short. I'd never have married a dolphin."
Darras, smiling as well, pulls her even (however impossibly) closer to him, as if in response to that ankle hook.
"As to your point, I'd argue that I'm lucky because of fate. Or maybe it's my luck that entwined my fate with yours. Either way, I won't be convinced otherwise."
"I won't try," Yseult replies, obviously assuaged by the knowledge that he considers her much more marriageable than a dolphin. She is laughing a little, the sort of fond chuckle that's more breath than sound, and follows the direction of his pull, pushing herself up half onto his chest where she can kiss his cheek or jaw or something in that general region.
"Go back to sleep," she urges, with that laugh in her voice and kissing him again, "I know it's my fault you're awake, but I'm not debating philosophy at this hour. Sleep."
"Sleep," he agrees. One last kiss, which he's got to twist to plant on her, whatever part of her he can get to--but he does, gladly. And then he does sleep.
The next morning is for chores, and breakfast, and chores after that--a nap in the afternoon, when the sun is highest and the hottest, no sense in trying to do anything when it's like that out, and when you're in Antiva, you might as well act like it--but in the afternoon, Darras gets out their little boat and they sail out into the cove, just where it turns to ocean.
This, in a way, is also a chore. Someone's got to catch their dinner--that's what Darras says to Yseult, as he casts his line out and holds one hand out for the bottle of rum they've brought along. Encouragement.
Yseult wedges her pole into a notch and stretches for the rum in the basket, loosening the cork and handing it over. She's not the most enthusiastic fisherman, but she doesn't mind the waiting, stretching out in the sailboat, wide hat brim shading her face and skirt twitched up to bare knees to the sun.
"I meant to tell you before we left," Yseult begins at some point, when the fish aren't biting and the last line of conversation has petered out, "Bastien had a magic ring that tells a person's true name, and it said my surname is Alström." She shrugs, like weird, huh?
The sun is lowering toward the horizon, but it is still very warm, and the breeze is making only the faintest ruffle across the water. Darras is looking at the freckles that have popped up on Yseult's knees. If you took ink, you could join them together the way they trace constellations on the star charts. Make shapes of them. He dips his finger in a spot of water and rum that's beaded on the seat of the boat, a makeshift pot of ink.
Yseult shrugs again, arms up and out this time to exaggerate the motion. "There is a magic ring that when you wear it, it tells you the name of everyone you see, even strangers or those in disguise. Bastien tested it and it seemed to work. At some point it told him my name is Yseult Alström. He told me, and when I wore it and looked in the mirror that's what I learned as well.
"That's all I know," she says, folding forward to reach for the rum on the bench beside him. "I'm not planning to use it, but I thought you should know."
She's allowed the rum, unimpeded. Darras is still turning over this revelation in his mind. Alström.
Of course he knows Yseult's past, where and who she came from. Sometimes--not lately, but earlier, when they were first married, usually when they were half-asleep or drunk on either wine or each other--he's asked her to describe what of her mother she remembers, so he can imagine her. Every time, Yseult had rolled her eyes, but complied. It was a game--a bit sad--but imagining some past, people, trying to picture where she was from. Having a surname doesn't complete the image. It's another piece. Stepping one foot on dry land and pulling your little boat closer to a shore.
"Alström." He tries it aloud. "What do you think that is--Anders?"
Yseult drinks, and lets him turn it around in his head as she's been doing, intermittently, since she learned. Hearing him say it aloud is strange, somehow twitching along her skin and making her want to shift where she sits, stretch and crack limbs. She's not sure if it's a good feeling or a bad one.
She holds still except to drink again, and then shrugs. "Maybe. I haven't searched the records for it."
She takes her time about it, pausing for a moment with the bottle on her lip, and then taking another, smaller sip before lowering it to hand back.
"I don't know," she admits. She shakes her head, and reaches up to comb fingers over her hair, where the breeze has lifted it from the loose crown of braids. "I'm not sure what I might find, but the chance of it being anything I want seems--." So slim it barely even merits that word, just another shake of head and shoulders. "Would you? If you were me?"
In the water, Darras' line twitches, and he turns to attend to it. Only a nibble. The fish doesn't bite. He keeps an eye on it anyways, waiting for that next nibble, thinking about what she's asked.
"If I was me, I wouldn't," he says, eventually. "If I was you, I would. I think knowing--you've never needed comforting. You're the strongest person I know. But you deserve it. You deserve knowing. If it's not what you want--I don't think you'd be disappointed, even then. Not you."
Yseult watches his line, too, as another forms between her brows. It's not displeasure, but a sort of mingled fondness and skepticism when she turns back from the nibbling fish.
"You give me too much credit. And it. It'll only be a sad story, or a terrible one. Why seek that out, just because I could bear it if I had to? What's to be gained from it?"
Darras looks away from the water, over at her. If the fish slips the line, he'll rebait the hook and cast off again. They're in close enough quarters that he could lean over and kiss the little crease between her brows. He wants to.
"I know you better'n anyone. I give you the credit I know you to deserve." He holds out his hand to her, fishing pole still gripped in the other. "It might well be a sad story. It'll be your story, still. Where you came from. Something separate from the rest of what your life's been. I think that's worth knowing."
"And if it was your parents?" The crease deepens and something in her jaw flexes, the joint worked side-to-side before it's set. "The truth of who they were and why they left you. That's part of your story. Is it incomplete without that?"
"It isn't a question for me. And I didn't say it'd be incomplete. You could live a whole life, not knowing, and never be troubled. You've done it up until now. But if you've got the chance, and you've even thought, for an instant, that you might want to know. Why not take that chance, then, while you've got it?"
He shrugs. Free hand still held to her, waiting for her to take it. His other hand holds the pole, keeping it steady.
Yseult seems to notice his hand then, though she'd hardly have missed it, and reaches out to meet it with some degree of hesitation or at least distraction. But her grip is firm, palm cool. She watches her fingers settle around his.
"The last time I wondered about a father or some other mystery family I was ten years old and shivering myself to sleep on a rooftop." There's some derisive note in her tone, consigning such notions to childhood or desperation or both. "Is it weaker to want it or not to?"
"I don't think it's weakness." Eyes still on the line, he can see their hands in his periphery. He doesn't need to see them. He has seen them, joined, so often, that he has memorized the way they look. Even when she lays her hand over his, fingers only loosely laced, he knows the way that looks. "Either way I don't think it is. I think it's just--knowing."
The line tugs, once, sharp. Darras tightens his hand on the fishing pole. The line goes slack again, almost instantly, but he doesn't relax just yet.
"The things we've seen--or dreamed--about the future--is it weakness, knowing that? Or wanthign to know what could happen?"
"Probably. Wanting anything too much is a weakness. Especially something so uncertain." Her tone is matter-of-fact, but there's a note of frustration creeping in through the disappearing gap between her jaws. She doesn't want to know; she's now even more sure of that.
"I'll think about it."
She drops his hand and rises, careful as ever not to unbalance the boat, and moves to take over the line. "Let's get back, we've enough for dinner."
Darras gives over the line easily enough. Yseult has proved herself clever with fishing, as she is clever with nearly all things. His gaze lingers on her a moment longer, a faint furrow to his brow. She's looking at the water now. She might be able to see him out of her periphery anyways, or sense his look.
"There's a fish on the line, nearly. Wait a moment longer and we'll have one more, and isn't that better."
(The trick is being clever at following directions; that's Yseult's real skill.) She's given the line a tug to start reeling it back in around the spool, but pauses at Darras's request. A huff of breath out her nose signals she's not in agreement with his logic, but she leaves off, giving him and the fish a moment more.
She doesn't say anything, just watches the line, hands poised.
hello look who it is, it's me
Date: 2022-06-25 09:43 pm (UTC)who???
Date: 2022-06-26 04:13 am (UTC);P
Date: 2022-06-28 12:52 am (UTC)Darras, smiling as well, pulls her even (however impossibly) closer to him, as if in response to that ankle hook.
"As to your point, I'd argue that I'm lucky because of fate. Or maybe it's my luck that entwined my fate with yours. Either way, I won't be convinced otherwise."
no subject
Date: 2022-06-28 01:31 am (UTC)"Go back to sleep," she urges, with that laugh in her voice and kissing him again, "I know it's my fault you're awake, but I'm not debating philosophy at this hour. Sleep."
no subject
Date: 2022-07-08 09:54 pm (UTC)The next morning is for chores, and breakfast, and chores after that--a nap in the afternoon, when the sun is highest and the hottest, no sense in trying to do anything when it's like that out, and when you're in Antiva, you might as well act like it--but in the afternoon, Darras gets out their little boat and they sail out into the cove, just where it turns to ocean.
This, in a way, is also a chore. Someone's got to catch their dinner--that's what Darras says to Yseult, as he casts his line out and holds one hand out for the bottle of rum they've brought along. Encouragement.
no subject
Date: 2022-07-13 03:50 am (UTC)"I meant to tell you before we left," Yseult begins at some point, when the fish aren't biting and the last line of conversation has petered out, "Bastien had a magic ring that tells a person's true name, and it said my surname is Alström." She shrugs, like weird, huh?
no subject
Date: 2022-07-13 04:39 am (UTC)Hang on, what?
"What?" He laughs. "You what?"
no subject
Date: 2022-07-14 07:00 pm (UTC)"That's all I know," she says, folding forward to reach for the rum on the bench beside him. "I'm not planning to use it, but I thought you should know."
no subject
Date: 2022-07-14 09:49 pm (UTC)Of course he knows Yseult's past, where and who she came from. Sometimes--not lately, but earlier, when they were first married, usually when they were half-asleep or drunk on either wine or each other--he's asked her to describe what of her mother she remembers, so he can imagine her. Every time, Yseult had rolled her eyes, but complied. It was a game--a bit sad--but imagining some past, people, trying to picture where she was from. Having a surname doesn't complete the image. It's another piece. Stepping one foot on dry land and pulling your little boat closer to a shore.
"Alström." He tries it aloud. "What do you think that is--Anders?"
no subject
Date: 2022-07-17 03:21 am (UTC)She holds still except to drink again, and then shrugs. "Maybe. I haven't searched the records for it."
no subject
Date: 2022-07-19 04:08 am (UTC)He waits until she's had her drink to ask it, and to reach to take the rum back from her so he can have a sip.
no subject
Date: 2022-07-23 10:11 am (UTC)"I don't know," she admits. She shakes her head, and reaches up to comb fingers over her hair, where the breeze has lifted it from the loose crown of braids. "I'm not sure what I might find, but the chance of it being anything I want seems--." So slim it barely even merits that word, just another shake of head and shoulders. "Would you? If you were me?"
no subject
Date: 2022-07-24 12:33 am (UTC)"If I was me, I wouldn't," he says, eventually. "If I was you, I would. I think knowing--you've never needed comforting. You're the strongest person I know. But you deserve it. You deserve knowing. If it's not what you want--I don't think you'd be disappointed, even then. Not you."
no subject
Date: 2022-08-29 03:28 am (UTC)"You give me too much credit. And it. It'll only be a sad story, or a terrible one. Why seek that out, just because I could bear it if I had to? What's to be gained from it?"
no subject
Date: 2022-08-29 05:09 am (UTC)"I know you better'n anyone. I give you the credit I know you to deserve." He holds out his hand to her, fishing pole still gripped in the other. "It might well be a sad story. It'll be your story, still. Where you came from. Something separate from the rest of what your life's been. I think that's worth knowing."
no subject
Date: 2022-10-11 03:06 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2022-10-14 03:40 am (UTC)He shrugs. Free hand still held to her, waiting for her to take it. His other hand holds the pole, keeping it steady.
no subject
Date: 2022-10-14 04:30 am (UTC)"The last time I wondered about a father or some other mystery family I was ten years old and shivering myself to sleep on a rooftop." There's some derisive note in her tone, consigning such notions to childhood or desperation or both. "Is it weaker to want it or not to?"
no subject
Date: 2022-10-25 03:35 am (UTC)The line tugs, once, sharp. Darras tightens his hand on the fishing pole. The line goes slack again, almost instantly, but he doesn't relax just yet.
"The things we've seen--or dreamed--about the future--is it weakness, knowing that? Or wanthign to know what could happen?"
no subject
Date: 2022-10-26 03:21 am (UTC)"I'll think about it."
She drops his hand and rises, careful as ever not to unbalance the boat, and moves to take over the line. "Let's get back, we've enough for dinner."
no subject
Date: 2022-10-26 04:14 am (UTC)"There's a fish on the line, nearly. Wait a moment longer and we'll have one more, and isn't that better."
sorry i wrote this in my head and only my head
Date: 2022-11-04 03:52 am (UTC)She doesn't say anything, just watches the line, hands poised.