Drifting [Samiyuq & Daniela]
May 11, 2021 0:06:06 GMT -5
Post by marguerite harvard d2a (zori) on May 11, 2021 0:06:06 GMT -5
October, Year 4
Her family welcomed weary travelers that needed a space to rest after having braved the snow peaked mountains stretched across five. Aurelia would ask as many questions as she could just as soon as they’d set foot through the door (where are you from? what’s it like across the distict? have you brought us anything?), to which Daniela would have to put both hands on her sister’s shoulders to contain the avalanche of curiosity flowing from her.
Still, she couldn’t blame Aurelia for wanting to know what it was like to travel from far away. Now and again, their father would pack up an old cart with a mare attached to the front and drive toward civilization, but he’d forbade either of his daughters from traveling with him. Not while the world was still falling apart, he’d said, listening to the radio broadcasts that still reeked of smoke and ash.
Her mother would spend all afternoon tending to the birria, bemoaning how when she was a girl it was so much easier to get goat, or that no one enjoyed the heat of the dried chiles as she did (but not to worry, she’d make sure that it was safe enough for any traveler that may have enjoyed the bland life of the districts). Daniela would help her father chop wood and set up the bonfire, a time when the two could spend hours not speaking to one another, and yet never feel more connected.
The fire crept in red and orange around the stone fire pit, illuminating the small collection of folding chairs they’d placed in a circle around it. She watched the light reflect off her glasses and could feel the heat swell along her cheeks. All the while warming her jeans and jacket, the fire striking back against the cold of the falling evening.
She didn’t know much about the traveler, aside from her mother had been yelling at Aurelia for messing around in the kitchen, which usually meant someone she’d deemed as important to have tucked away into the spare room on the first floor. Daniela had even had to bring in the good sheets, those that she kept underneath the stares with dried lilac over them. The last time they’d pulled them out, her father’s brother had been on his way to the front.
Daniela hadn’t said more than a few words – hola, hello, how are you? – before she’d busied herself outside. She often found it was far better to dream of who the visitors were, before they revealed themselves than to be disappointed with their answers. After all, most of the people that spent the night with them spoke so poorly of their trip, with such a fervor to get back to civilization, she wondered if they didn’t notice the contempt they spat across the floor of her family’s house.
Her mother had whistled when her father and the visitor came out, and Daniela had turned to study hir. Except she didn’t stare long. It wasn’t polite, anyway.
“Are you hungry?” Daniela moved as she spoke, pulling up one of the bowls set out along a folding table next to the metal pot they’d placed atop a small wood stove. She ladled out a few scoops and stuck in a spoon. Her father and mother had gone down the road to whisper to one another. “I apologize for them, I hope my father didn’t bore you with stories about taking our eggs into town.”
She smiled, and held out the bowl. “I’m Daniela.”[ saunders collection '05 - rave ]