[Cain is aware what day it is and, as you probably guessed, he's drunk. Plastered. In the garden, twirling a ripped-off stick deftly between his fingers. He only slips at the end when he's meant to catch it.
He sings, too, as he's wont to do.]
...but I've still got my health, so what do I care?
My best friend, alas, is a glass solitaire,
but I still got my health, so what do I care?
By fashion and foppery, I'm never discussed.
Attending the opry, my box would be a bust....
[ooc: feel free to catch him in the gardens, the halls, wherever. I'm not bothering with much continuity, it's a free for all.]
He sings, too, as he's wont to do.]
...but I've still got my health, so what do I care?
My best friend, alas, is a glass solitaire,
but I still got my health, so what do I care?
By fashion and foppery, I'm never discussed.
Attending the opry, my box would be a bust....
[ooc: feel free to catch him in the gardens, the halls, wherever. I'm not bothering with much continuity, it's a free for all.]
no subject
Date: 2013-07-14 08:39 am (UTC)What is true is that she loves him; another thing she doesn't say aloud. Shaping words around it makes it a question that needs an answer, a game with changed rules, and she rather thinks they're both better off without rules or answers - and while her instincts want to distract him away from the grief today's making him dwell on, that feels selfish, perhaps disrespectful, and she chooses not to try.
She holds him, not because he needs comfort but because she wants to; because of the solid strength of him against her, because of the tired power in his bones, because of the scent of his skin against the cool air of the night garden. Not because nothing else matters: it all matters and they both know it - but because this matters, too.]