I said “don’t trust him”, baby, now you know. You don’t learn everything there is to know in school.
Tyves 4th, 1513 – Edge of Merchant District, River Sulis, Lothianshire, Albion
“Finn?” Kevin peered around his easel, eyes narrowed almost to slits before tipping his paintbrush ninety degrees to the side then righting it again. He made a vague noise in the back of his throat before putting his brush back to the canvas. Considering how simple the painting was, well comparatively, it was not wanting to pour out like usual. Or maybe it was just that normally when he was doing a portrait seating, he wanted to get the subject in and out of his studio as quickly as possible.
He wouldn’t care if this one took all week.
“Finn, I know you can hear me. I’m starting to lose feeling in my legs.”
“Just hold it for a little longer,” He scrubbed along an edge, trying to capture the loose waves of burnished copper hair that were just escaping him, the bright color refusing to flow with half the light and life on the canvas.
“You know, I have enough sadistic men in my life.” He tipped to the side and peered around the edge of the canvas. He met the ever-shifting green eyes set under brows with a permanent cynical tilt to them.
“Pardon?”
“The baron, the Captain of the guard… my husband–all sadistic bastards when they set their minds to it, even they don’t tell me I have to sit exactly so and can’t move for hours.” Annette said, though there was definitely a teasing tone in her voice. “If I can’t feel my extremities after two hours, the root is usually boredom.”
“Well, it’s just so infrequently that I get beautiful half-dressed women in my bed.” He grinned at her.
“Right.” She drew the word out comically.
“Just a couple more minutes, please, Annette?” He pleaded.
“And my legs?”
“Are really nice.” Kevin said distractedly, bringing the brush back to the canvas to rough in the lay of the hand, he hesitated for a moment on her wedding ring. I can always add it in later. He told himself.
“If I had a shoe, I’d throw it at you right now.” She sighed. He echoed it, looking at the scribbles on his canvas. She probably would throw something at him if he didn’t let her get up soon. But he probably had enough done to work on it when she wasn’t there.
“All right, you can get up.” He continued to work on some of the lines as he heard her clamber over the trunk at the foot of the bed. She stretched, the long line of her back popping softly as she did so. Her feet were nearly silent as they padded across the tile floor and over to one of the chairs he kept for portrait work where she kicked her feet out stretching the back of her legs.
“You are really are cruel.” Annette told him.
“It’s just the subject matter, it–captures me.” Annette snorted cynically. Inwardly Kevin cringed, even if she looked like a young girl with her hair loose and soft like that, like an angel in her floaty petticoats, the black pattern on her corset like slashes of shadow only serving as accent to the pale perfection of her face, all she had to do was say something and it was readily apparent that she was not. “Just how often do you think I have pretty girls in my bedroom dressed only in their unmentionables?”
“Often enough.” She said blandly, though there was something in her face when she said it, something he couldn’t read.
“Not really, no, honestly!” He told her before she could be derisive again. “It really doesn’t happen that often.”
“Maybe it’s your bedroom then.” She smirked at him. He stuck his tongue out at her. “Really, I would think twice about coming to a place like this and stripping down to my shift if I had any virtue to protect.”
“This place might not be in the best neighborhood, it might be a little rundown, it might even have a few disreputable people living in the lower floor, but has the best light in the entire city. As you would know if you ever spent the night with me and could see it at sunrise.”
“And you know why I can’t do that.” Annette told him sighing and looking toward the window that if it had bigger than a copper sized panes of glass in it, would look toward her house.
“Right, the husband, the kid.” Kevin didn’t sigh, but he wanted to. He knew how much Annette loved her daughter and how, often, it was probably having Lyssandra in her life that got her out of bed and going in the morning. But that husband of hers was a–he lacked the proper words for what Masen Cox was because–as the old saw went–it was insulting to whatever he might try to compare it to. In fact they should be calling old rancid bags of shit Masen Coxes as an insult to such bags.
“Keeping the kid away from the husband.” Annette added softly. Kevin grimaced–but only to keep from shivering at Annette’s comment. He couldn’t imagine–doing any of the things that Annette said or implied that Cox did. Of course, he could have written if off as a bitter wife trying to get revenge on her husband for not loving her, but there was something about the way that she shut down when Cox came up in conversation–something that only borne out Kevin’s impressions from the first time that Annette had sat for a portrait–a gift for her mother–and Cox had come with her.
“But doesn’t your husband go to court with the baron? And didn’t the baron leave this morning for a whole month?” Kevin asked with a quirked eyebrow.
“I can’t leave my daughter at home by herself overnight.” She glanced over her shoulder at the big double window.
“You still have a good three quarters of an hour before Lyssa is out of lessons.” He didn’t even have to look over his shoulder–for all that he often got involved in painting, he had always had a very, very accurate judgment when it came to time.
“I still can’t stay.” She looked down at her hands. “That’s why you shouldn’t get involved with middle age married women.” She shook her hand at him like a school marm scolding a little boy who’d done wrong.
“You’re not middle aged.”
“You obviously haven’t met my father-in-law.” Annette shook her head and leaned back against the chair, eyes fixed on the embossed metal ceiling tiles.
“And I shall add that to my prayers of thanksgiving tonight.” Kevin promised earnestly. “But what does your father-in-law have to do with pointing out that you are not middle aged.”
“All he could do was remind me about how I’m not getting any younger, how old I am.” Annette sighed.
“Well, he raised your husband so if he knows his ass from his elbow, it’s probably by accident.” Kevin told her. “But I’m still not seeing the connection.”
“He wants Masen and I to have another child, a boy. Masen needs an heir.”
“To what? The throne as King of all arseholes?” Kevin shook his head as Annette snorted back laughter.
“I dunno, maybe it’s Ellan’s way of saying that he hopes that I get pregnant and die giving birth leaving his precious son open for a better, younger, more docile, sweeter little mouse of a wife who’ll make him happy.” Annette folded the fabric on her lap like a fan and stared at it.
“I don’t think that any woman who would make your husband happy technically qualifies as a woman–not if she’s old enough to marry him.” Kevin said. “Besides younger isn’t everything.”
“Younger means more you’re fertile, like you’re a bloody field, more time for bearing sons.” Annette restlessly lurched to her feet.
“Which I might worry about if I were trying to get someone pregnant. But as I’m kinda trying to do the opposite, I don’t see where that even factors in. Besides, despite what those lovely Cox boys might’ve told you, being young and a brood mare popping out a boy every year is not what every man is looking for. Some men are looking for women who keep a man on his toes and argue philosophy with them in the middle of the afternoon because they can–and threaten to throw shoes at them because they’ve been posing too long.” He had stood up as he was speaking and followed her across the floor, putting an arm around her shoulder
“I’m busting my ass trying to raise a daughter in a world where people will look down on her because of what she doesn’t have between her legs. Trying to tell her she’s just as good, as smart, as capable and then her grandfather comes for a visit and she asks me why her grandfather hates her.” Annette said. “I don’t want Lyssa to have to be hard. I don’t want Lyssa to have to explain to her daughter why her grandfather hates her–or for that matter why she can’t call her father “father”–or if…” Her voice trailed off.
“If?” He prompted.
“If she wished that she had never met her husband.” Annette looked up at him. “And I don’t, I might wish that he will fall into the river and drown while in Camelot, but I don’t wish that I had never met him. Because I can’t imagine me life without her. But I don’t want her mother to be the only one who ever thinks of her that way. I want her to have the–faerie tale.”
“I was raised to be charming, not sincere.” Kevin quoted softly.
“And not with one of those princes!” Annette said. “I want her to have that, though.”
“And she will. When she’s old enough, she’ll find a guy who loves her for her heart, admires her mind and her strength, adores her quirks, and all of that in spite of her smart mouth.”
“What makes you think my daughter has a smart mouth?” Annette narrowed her eyes at him.
“Her mother.”
“I guess I kinda walked into that one.” Annette admitted. “But you really think so? Not every girl does, I mean I…”
“Found me.” Kevin said as cockily as he could.
“I don’t know whether to hit you or hug you.” Annette shook her head.
“Hug me, the world needs more hugs.” She laughed and just briefly buried her head in his shoulder. But his conscience told him that he should tell her that it was time to head home to her daughter.
After she dressed and fixed her hair, two things that never failed to make her look like a prim schoolmarm, for all that her hair was loose around her shoulders, he lead her to the front door and down the stairs, though there was a staircase that lead directly up to his bedroom, they never used that one because it looked rather improper. And she was a moderately well known person being so closely attached to the Baron.
By the old overgrown garden, he gave her another hug, they always said their goodbyes here–again because of possible impropriety.
“I swear the man who built this place was macabre.” Annette commented as they walked out the side gate. “What’s up with the gargoyles–and why do they face in?”
“I think they’re mooning the people walking by.” Annette looked at him then up at the gargoyle arses above her head.
“So he just had a twisted sense of humor?”
“Well, he probably was macabre and had a twisted sense of humor, you did see the fresco of the churchmen and the decapitated heads in the vestibulum, right? And the one of the girl impaling herself on a sword in my bedroom?” Annette was still chuckling when she turned and walked off home. She was one of those women that as much as he loved to see her come and hated to see her go, he loved to watch her leave.
He felt restless as he tried to think of something else to do with his afternoon, so he returned to his bedroom and picked up painting where he had left off. In some ways, the fact that she wasn’t there made painting her all the easier. It meant he spent less time worried that he could never do justice to the curl of her hair or the sparkle of humor and cynicism in her eyes and more time trying to capture the fire he could see all to well in his mind and that was all the better.
And when he finally laid the brushes aside and stepped back from his painting, Kevin figured he knew exactly how Pygmalion of legend had felt. His fingers, with mind of the wet paint, hovered just over the canvas, tracing the line of her jaw before falling to his side. Then his eyes, managing to peel away from hers which had pinned him in place from the canvas as easily as they did in person, slid toward the north and he sighed. His painting wouldn’t come to life, but maybe–someday…
It’s bizarre to write someone who is waxing romantically over a character based off you. It is weird. Anyway, this was who was at the door at the end of this post.
But on the plus side, I’m liking Kevin as a character, he wasn’t as much of a smartass in my planning, but he’s good at it. And I like his house. *giggles*
Yeah, I hope someday, too. I hope someday SOON. Hopefully Masen will fall into that river in Camelot and Annette can have her Kevin!
And maybe Lyssa can get a good father-figure in her life, too. Hey, Kevin seems like he has a good heart, he’d probably be willing to let her in for herself if he doesn’t want to do it solely for Annette’s sake.
Still, these two are sweet together. So much better than Annette and Cox. I’m glad Annette has somebody like Kevin in her life — it seems like a breath of fresh air she so desperately needs.
And with any luck, that breath of fresh air will soon become a dependable breeze blowing through her life. A girl can hope, can’t she?
As you are constantly reminding me (about Mordred), Cox doesn’t do me any good dead. I understand the urge to want him to fall into the river. I understand the urge to want him to die in the random anvil drop. But still he’s still got use to the Chipmunk and so he shall survive to another day. *sigh*
I think that Kevin would probably like Lyssa and would be a good father figure if Masen weren’t in the way screwing up her head and making her feel bad about herself, but I think that Annette and Kevin are both a little loathe to put him into that position because I’m not sure that Lyssa would understand why her mother has a “friend” and doesn’t just fix what’s wrong with her and Masen. (Unfortunately Lyssa doesn’t understand that what’s wrong with Masen isn’t something that Annette can fix. Only Masen can fix it. And quite frankly he’s not self-aware enough to know he’s in the wrong.)
You can always hope, for now just being able to have a few days a week that she can breath in fresh air rather than toxic and be with a friend and have witty banter and what not is probably saving her sanity almost as much as Lyssa.
Thanks, Morgaine!
Ooooh, I like Kevin! He is kind and thoughtful and cute! Yes, I vote for some variety of anvil-drop to befall Masen as well. Annette deserves so much better than Masen.
Annette is brilliant, as always. I’m glad she has someone she can talk to who isn’t seven. The banter between these two was great–there was real understanding here, a firm connection.
In fact they should be calling old rancid bags of shit Masen Coxes as an insult to such bags.
Awesome, those were all traits I was hoping people would see in Kevin. (He is rather cute, isn’t he?) Eh, so does Jeda… Man that sim just never ends up a good guy for his wives… tsk, tsk, tsk.
Yes, having a confidante that is not her daughter is a good thing, because she really doesn’t want to interfere with Lyssa’s relationship with Masen. Doesn’t want her opinion of Masen to effect Lyssa’s opinion of Masen. And that Lyssa should come to what ever decisions she makes about her father based solely on her own decisions.
And plus there’s just some things you can’t say to a seven year old. (Father or no.) So…
I do sometimes worry, as I’m characterizing Masen that you’re regretting letting me use him… Especially after the last episode…
Thanks, Van!
Kevin is officially adorable. I wish Jeda had a Kevin to make living with Masen’s mothership more bearable.
Nice as it would be for Lyssa to have a not-Masen father figure in her life, it’s good for Annette to have something that’s just hers right now. She probably encounters very few people who don’t connect her identity with others, for better or worse. To Kevin, it seems like she’s Annette the sim first and whatever else second (and Masen’s wife a distant fourteenth, if at all.) She’s a little different with Kevin – still guarded, but lighter in a way, not so tense. I hope we’ll see more of them soon.
Oh yes, I wish Jeda had a Kevin too. I have this picture on my harddrive that always reminds me of Jeda it’s got a picture of a lady with the caption: Remember Ladies, Just because a man is plowing your field doesn’t mean he owns the land. He can always be evicted, as there are many farmers… and ones with bigger plows.
Van said she’d like to put that on the ceiling over Jeda’s bed when I shared it with her.
That, yes, is one of the biggest differences between Kevin and most everyone else in her life. He knows she’s married. He knows who her husband is. But that doesn’t have anything to do with how he views or sees her. Too many other people put a lot of emphasis on the fact that she is the wife of Masen Cox. That’s all she is, really, to some people in her life. His identity is more important than hers or at least always attached to hers.
She needs a person in her life that sees her as Annette and Masen as unimportant.
Thanks, Winter!