#turpentine bush
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
November 9, 2018
Desert Botanical Garden
Phoenix, AZ
#photography#desert botanical garden#desert#arizona#flower#flowers#lantana#west indian lantana#fairy duster#baja fairy duster#turpentine bush
3 notes
·
View notes
Text
I don’t think I could accrue wealth if I was a vampire. I simply wouldn’t know how. I love spending money. Realistically, I’d probably just use mind control for financial gain or wanton murder and falsified wills. But I really wouldn’t be good at it. I mean, it wouldn’t come naturally. I’d probably spend it all in the first week on something frivolous. I’d commission a fondant statue of myself. I’d attempt to replicate Damien Hirst at home and end up ruining the property with the formaldehyde. I’d get into oil painting and spill turpentine everywhere. I’d buy cars and crash them into the bushes. I’d have the grand idea to build life-sized marionettes of everyone I know and then I’d give up halfway and leave the parts strewn everywhere. I’d spend an inordinate amount of money surveilling everyone I know 24/7 and then I’d get bored after finding out too much about them and ruining the illusion of love for myself. I’d build an indoor pool that was three stories high and then abandon it because it’s too deep and therefore a little creepy. I’d buy every type of fabric and methodically set each one on fire to see how it burns. I’d definitely get really into arson. I enjoy arson. I’d break into houses to turn the gas on and watch it blow. I’d build a tank and fill it with sharks and I’d toss food in to watch them feed. I’d abandon them after I got bored. I’d collect rugs and plaster all four walls with them and make a complicated furred cave-like system inside my house. I’d kidnap famous people I was fond of and then get bored and accidentally leave them in dungeons. I’d set up shop in a UNESCO world heritage site because I’ve always really wanted to experience the ancient world firsthand. I’d pester older vampires about where they came from until they made me stop. I’d throw dishes at the wall and watch them break and then I’d throw axes and then I’d throw bowling balls. I’d drag my claws through the wallpaper and ruin everything. I’d key cars with them. I’d key people’s faces with them. I’d pour acid down the drain. I’d get really into tools, and I’d test them on all manner of surfaces. I’d get really into dehydrating things for a fortnight and it would culminate in me dehydrating things that shouldn’t be dehydrated. I’d watch blood soak through hardwood floors from the underside. I’d build water tanks a la The Prestige and put myself in them until I got bored. I’d get really into magic tricks, then get immediately frustrated when I wasn’t perfect at them, and then I’d kill the audience out of pride. I’d go to movies and tear up the projector if I didn’t like the film. I’d go to plays and I’d tie up everyone and try on all the costumes and play with the props if I liked the production. And if I didn’t like it I’d just have some breakfast. I’d go to church obsessively and then get frustrated one day and I’d eat the priest. I’d watch the pews from the rafters and and listen to confession. I’d get into ice sculpture and I’d get angry every spring. I’d get into robots and I’d build them to rip them apart. Then I’d start all over again. I’d study people and draw diagrams of their minds. I’d kidnap someone and go through their memories like a filing cabinet. I’d open up an ATM to see what it looks like inside. I’d probably feed things to escalators. Boring.
19 notes
·
View notes
Note
Oddest alternative name for a liquor you've heard? For me that spot is held by hearing jagermeister being called blotting paper
Skunk piss, camel piss... Looks at Corona.
Also just "piss", but that's not really odd to me cuz I'm Australian and we just call beer piss.
Bush chook? For Emu Lager specifically? I guess?
I heard someone once call Great Northern "bait Northern" cuz people always buy it as takeaway for fishing trips...
Heard Everclear be called cyanide, strychnine, turpentine... "Paint thinner" is probably my favourite of that bunch. Heard moonshine be called that too.
9 notes
·
View notes
Text
spells; arson.
rodolphus had many talents from the time he was a child to the present. those talents only grew and were perfected every day and night. corvus had done well in teaching he spells necessary but there was one in particular rodolphus had learned on his own. a favorite. fire. flames. arson. he’d found the spell in a book hiding in the bookcase of the lestrange manor. he didn’t need convincing to grab it and soak his mind with knowledge. it came so easily. it’s as though the spell was meant for him. as he continued reading, he read about the muggle way to cause fire. muggles were filthy but the idea of spreading gasoline toward a body also soaked in the accelerant was something he had to give the trash he fought everyday of his life. doing it this way would cause even more fear than a quick spell. anyone who knew rodolphus knew causing fear of others was something he thrived on. as a child, he began playing with the spell, lighting everything from bushes to small rodents who held no worth. as with everything else he was masterful. at hogwarts he tortured muggleborn students into coming back from break with the necessary items to cause muggle fire. from there, his eyes brightened at the effects. they were better than he ever dreamed. having his own ways to always have gasoline, matches, lighters, oil, kerosine, turpentine and paint thinner there was always something in his back pocket. he made sure to keep it up to date, getting a thrill when his stockpile overflowed. all he had to do was find something or someone to set ablaze which wasn’t difficult but he enjoyed keeping this a secret. a secret that gave him an edge.
0 notes
Text
My Spotify Wrapped 2023 top 100 under the cut
1 - Blinding by Florence + The Machine
2 - Lily by Alan Walker
3 - Different World by Alan Walker
4 - Monochrome by Babymetal
5 - Devil By The Window by TxT
6 - Natural by Imagine Dragons
7 - Ribs by The Crane Wives
8 - Paranoia by Kang Daniel
9 - The King Must Die by Purple Rain
10 - Sing Me To Sleep by Alan Walker
11 - Mr. Capgras Encounters A Secondhand Vanity by Will Wood and The Tapeworms
12 - Believer by Imagine Dragons
13 - Rabbit Heart (Raise It Up) by Florence + The Machine
14 - Bite Me by Enhypen
15 - Lost Control by Alan Walker
16 - The Hand That Feeds by The Crane Wives
17 - Hand Me My Shovel, I'm Going In by Will Wood and The Tapeworms
18 - Farewell Neverland by TxT
19 - Ghost by Xdinary Heroes
20 - Arsonist's Lullaby by Hozier
21 - Sacrifice (Eat Me Up) by Enhypen
22 - Land Of Confusion by Genesis
23 - The Moon Will Sing by The Crane Wives
24 - Loveable by Jo Yuri
25 - ... Well, Better Than The Alternative by Will Wood
26 - Demons by Imagine Dragons
27 - Metaphor by The Crane Wives
28 - Favorite Part by Jo Yuri
29 - Pride And Joy by Brandi Carlile
30 - Kingslayer by Bring Me The Horizon and Babymetal
31 - Curses by The Crane Wives
32 - Blank by Jo Yuri
33 - Swear by E'Last
34 - Sugar Rush Ride by TxT
35 - Never Love An Anchor by The Crane Wives
36 - Shinigami by Kenshi Yonezu
37 - Breaking Down by Florence + The Machine
38 - Get Away by Verivery
39 - Keep You Safe by The Crane Wives
40 - Flower Dance by DJ Okawari
41 - Black Eye by Vernon
42 - Chaconne by Enhypen
43 - Hard Sell by The Crane Wives
44 - Darkside by Alan Walker
45 - Running Up That Hill (A Deal With God) by Kate Bush
46 - Karma by Enhypen
47 - Allies Or Enemies by The Crane Wives
48 - Heart's Content by Brandi Carlile
49 - BingBing by Oneus
50 - Bills by Enhypen
51 - Unraveling by The Crane Wives
52 - No Light, No Light by Florence + The Machine
53 - Nap Of A Star by TxT
54 - Fate by Enhypen
55 - New Discovery by The Crane Wives
56 - Cry For Me by Twice
57 - On My Way by Alan Walker
58 - Magic Island by TxT
59 - Sleeping Giants by The Crane Wives
60 - Alone Together by Fallout Boy
61 - Zombie by Purple Kiss
62 - Sharks by Imagine Dragons
63 - Little Soldiers by The Crane Wives
64 - Express Moon by Jo Yuri
65 - Given-Taken by Enhypen
66 - Seven Devils by Florence + The Machine
67 - Rockslide by The Crane Wives
68 - I Can't Decide by Scissor Sisters
69 - Cotard's Solution by Will Wood and The Tapeworms
70 - Dog Days Are Over by Florence + The Machine
71 - Of Everlong by The Crane Wives
72 - Laplace's Angel (Hurt People? Hurt People!) By Will Wood
73 - Dark Dream by E'Last
74 - My Face by Verivery
75 - The Garden by The Crane Wives
76 - What Did I Ever Come Here For by Brandi Carlile
77 - Voodoo Doll by VIXX
78 - Faded by Alan Walker
79 - Frost by TxT
80 - I Will Follow You into the Dark by Death Cab for Cutie
81 - Love Is Dead by Purple Kiss
82 - Acoustic #3 by The Goo Goo Dolls
83 - Raise Hell by Brandi Carlile
84 - Broken Home by 5 Seconds of Summer
85 - Howl by Florence + The Machine
86 - 기기괴괴 by Pink Fantasy
87 - Yes, To Err Is Human, So Don't Be One by Will Wood
88 - Pretty Little Things by The Crane Wives
89 - Tears Of Chaos by E'Last
90 - 100 by Brandi Carlile
91 - O by Verivery
92 - Iris by The Goo Goo Dolls
93 - Can't Go Back by The Crane Wives
94 - Turpentine by Brandi Carlile
95 - The Phoenix by Fallout Boy
96 - Photo by Verivery
97 - Not The Ghost by The Crane Wives
98 - My Song by Brandi Carlile
99 - Right Through Me by Day6 (Even of Day)
100 - Anti-Hero by M.O.N.T
0 notes
Text
GOOD MORNING, Friends! Mauri Lion enjoys a good roll in the morning dew on the soft grass. ANIMAL FACTS: Lions are unique among cats in that they live in a group or pride. The members of a pride typically spend the day in several scattered groups that may unite to hunt or share a meal. A pride consists of several generations of lionesses, some of which are related, a smaller number of breeding males, and their cubs. The group may consist of as few as 4 or as many as 37 members, but about 15 is the average size. Each pride has a well-defined territory consisting of a core area that is strictly defended against intruding lions and a fringe area where some overlap is tolerated. Where prey is abundant, a territory area may be as small as 20 square km (8 square miles), but if game is sparse, it may cover up to 400 square km. Some prides have been known to use the same territory for decades, passing the area on between females. Lions proclaim their territory by roaring and by scent marking. Their distinctive roar is generally delivered in the evening before a night’s hunting and again before getting up at dawn. Males also proclaim their presence by urinating on bushes, trees, or simply on the ground, leaving a pungent scent behind. Defecation and rubbing against bushes leave different scent markings. (From Britannica)
#FundingFreedom #TurpentineCreek #RescueToRefuge #FindingFreedom #GivingTuesday #Animals #Arkansas #HappyCats #TurpentineCreekWildlifeRefuge #Sanctuary #TCWR #FundFreedom #weekend #BigCat #EurekaSprings #everyone #Animalreels #ozarks #funnyanimals #lions #reel #funnyreels #fbreelsvideo #cat #reelit #reelsvideo #reelsviral #reelitfeelit #reels #reelsforyou
Learn more about Turpentine Wildlife Refuge at https://www.turpentinecreek.org/
0 notes
Text
8/20/2023
Afternoon Songs
Thyme: Time
Raining In Idyllwild
A Tropical Storm
It Feels So Good
To Nourish Our Earth
Raining In Idyllwild
A Tropical Storm
Not A Hurricane
Afterall
Why Women Always
Pass On Their Names
To Natural Disasters
I Want A Star
For My 50Th
Named For Me
#Nitya4Eternity
My Civil War Activists
Nitya X
#Nitya4Eternity
Needs A Charity
For All Of Us
#Nitya4Eternity
Malcom X
Nitya X
Britney X
Cares Dear
I Want You To
Be A Free Bird
Camping In California
Or Mother Maui
If You're Too Frightened
Come Here To Serve
But Too Afraid
Of A Storm
Maybe Mammas
Need A Better
Defense Team
Qualified
Quantified
Too Afraid
Of A Summer Storm
What Might It
Wash Up
Too Afraid Of A Summer
Storm
Why Is That Love
Too Many Skeletons
Buried In The Dessert
Too Many Skeletons
Come Unearthed
In This Weather
Not Hurricane Hilary
Afterall
Too Many Skeletons
In The British Closet
Commonwealth
Canceled Games
They Don't Wanna Be
Part Of Your Agenda
Got The Huntley Castle
In Scotland
If You Need Somewhere
To Go
Rebuild
With Billions
For Integrity
Elon X
"O"
Show
Tropical Storms
Maybe Not
Cold Cold Cold Rain
In Kilts
You Know
Naked Legs
Huntley Tartans
Red And Blue
Green Plaids
Warmies
Hike
Rain Or Shine
Wits Abound
Sport
But What We All Know
Is That We're Not
Going To Play Your Wars
No More Trauma
Bonding
Worst Time Of Our Life
No More #NonceCharles
King Henry
No One Wants Your
Strife
We Didn't Hire
Secret Service Spies
To Seduce
And Lie
We Didn't Hire
Social Workers
Bribed Officers
We Didn't Hire
These Gays On Bribes
We Didn't Hire
The Bush Administration
We Didn't Hire
Schmitz Eunuchs
Trumpleberry
Landlord
Celebrity "Social Media" Scammers
We Didn't Hire
The CHINESE To Take
Our Reigns
We Didn't Hire Them
But Morgellans
Spike Proteins
Sprouted Out
Of Covid Variants
Anyways
At Hospitals
We Didn't Hire
Your Courts For Medical
Advice
Invite
Them To Practice
Medicine
On Us
We Got That Covered
Take Some Thyme
Ivermectin
C And Zinc
Slow Home Cooked
Tiffin
Picnicking
Take Some Time
Hydrochlorinine
Take Some Time
Turpentine
For Your Loved Ones
And Think Of Me
Take Some Time
Before You Die
With Trinity
Goddess And Me
Mammas
Dr. Kazi Pleas
Take Some Thyme
N.D. Said
Take Some Time
Honey
With Your Kids
Parents
God Children
One Things For Sure
Someday
We'll All Be
Dead
It's The Physics
Reality
Peace-
Nitya Nella Davigo Azam Moezzi Huntley
Rawal
0 notes
Text
“Running Up That Hill” - The entire time I was painting this, I was hearing, in my head, Kate Bush’s song “Running Up That Hill.” So it was natural to give this painting that title. This was painted digitally using the Procreate app with the dry brush and the turpentine brush.
0 notes
Photo
Walking through the bush during our BigCi residency at times felt like a different place & time. With all the different types of trees it was hard to tell if the trunks had been burnt or were Ironbark trees. The way the different trees deal with their environment were fascinating to learn from Yuri of BigCi. . . . . . @bigciaustralia #bush #australia #trees #eucalyptus #ironbark #turpentine #landscape #landscapephotography #forest #environment #treesofinstagram #photooftheday #fujifilmgfx100s #gfx100s @fujifilmx_au @fujifilmuk #conservation #bilpin #nsw (at Bilpin, New South Wales, Australia) https://www.instagram.com/p/ChfUF8WI-fn/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
#bush#australia#trees#eucalyptus#ironbark#turpentine#landscape#landscapephotography#forest#environment#treesofinstagram#photooftheday#fujifilmgfx100s#gfx100s#conservation#bilpin#nsw
0 notes
Text
T H E
P A R I S
C H R O N I C L E S
Warnings: Smoking, drinking and smut in the other chapters. This is set in Nice in the 1950’s, I have never been to the French riviera and I wasn’t alive in the 50’s, so probably a very inaccurate description of the place (also at times simply just made up).
Summary: Newly divorced you decide to travel to the Riviera and spend the summer in the house you and Timothée have inherited. After a very successful art exhibition he comes down to join you. Things should be easy, but they aren't.
Themes: Artist!Timmy, period piece (1950's).
R E A D
P A R T
O N E
A N D
T W O
H E R E
***
Menton - July, 1953
Menton, the most easterly town of the Côte d'Azur, belonging to the Arrondissement of Nice. It is located practically on the French-Italian border, the influences of both countries clear in multi-coloured houses, the decorated windows and in the sixteenth century bell tower.
The beaches are rocky but wide, and in the summer season packed with vacationists looking for an escape from the city; to lay their bodies down and soak up some sun, breath in some fresh air and occasionally to dip their bodies into the ocean in an attempt to escape the heat and cool down.
There’s a village square, in the middle of which a fountain; made in a century in which people still believed in dragons. From Bentwood chairs you can sit back and enjoy a meal, or a simple cappuccino, al fresco; as you watch the occasional hopeful tourist throw a coin into the fountain, making wishes with sanguine smiles. Or perhaps play a game of chess with a stranger.
On a cobbled-stone street nearby a market is set up each morning in a belle-epoque building, inside of which cheese, fish and meat are sold, and outside vendors are selling fruits and vegetables on wooden tables covered by green cloths.
Away from the pastell-coloured village and the expensive resorts and hotels by the beach there are steep hills, where most of the Menton locals reside. Some houses small and quaint; others almost obscene in their obvious wealth.
One of these houses is called Villa Marguerite
***
From the villa you can see the ocean spread out in front of you, almost recklessly big and bold and blue. Behind the house; acres upon acres of lemon trees, the bright yellow and green hues creating sharp contrasts to all the surrounding blue. There’s a garden too, emerald green grass and cedar trees that with rain will spread its heady scent all over the property; some mornings it is the first thing you smell.
The morning sun shines upon the terrace and you lean back in your wicker chair and sip on your morning coffee. Music is coming from the kitchen radio, only a few meters away.
The day lay planned and untraveled in front of you with all its horrifying possibilities. In a few hours Timothée’s train will arrive at the station and the upcoming reunion fills you with equal parts anticipation and terror. You had offered to meet him there, as his train arrives. You can picture it in front of you, standing on the dusty station under the scorching sun, eyes on the railroad track before you, awaiting the first sign of the train. You’d wear something nice for him, a white sundress perhaps; to show him that you are still the young sweet girl he fell for in Paris – that the colossal weight of a wedding ring on your left ring finger has not left you changed. You can picture what he’ll show up in, paint-stained jeans and white t-shirt. It will be awkward at first, it must be after all these months apart. But you’d conquer your fear and you’d hug him, pull him tight against you and breath him in; the familiar scent of him, the irresistible and unplaceable mixture of turpentine and smokey whiskey and of Paris.
There have been nights you’ve woken up gasping for air, where your hands have searched in vain around you in bed, panic-stricken, looking for the familiar frame of a lost lover. Every time, upon realizing that he’s not there, you would fall back against the mattress, and with deep breaths force your lungs to accept air. You’d close your eyes tightly shut and perhaps it was a trick your brain played on you, some devilish scheme – but in those moments, when you needed him the most you could almost concoct his scent out of thin air, could almost smell him, almost feel him lay beside you. There were times you would have sworn on anything holy you could feel the warmth of his body beside yours.
You had suggested to meet him at the station, but he had turned your offer down so firmly it had bordered on rudeness.
In the passing months since his department from London you had shared two brief, silence-filled phone calls.
One of them early one morning in May, just as the lilac bush burst out in bloom outside your window, the scent of them heady and intoxicating, and the missing weight of a diamond ring on your left hand still a strange sensation. Still you lift the phone; asking the operator for a number in France. You had called up his studio to inform him that you had moved out of your soon-to-be former husband’s house and were now taking house in Mayfair, in case he needed to reach you. Timothée´s voice had been tense and hoarse, as if he had just woken up and was not happy about it. In the background a woman had laughed.
The second time he had called you, in the late hours of the evening mid-June, just as the magnolias had set in bloom. You had informed him that you were planning to go down to Menton the following week, to start with the process of going through your aunt’s possessions. He in turn had informed you that his exhibition was to finish up on the 15th of July, after which he planned to travel to Nice by train and thus arrive the following morning. You had then offered to meet him at the station, to show him the way to the house at his arrival, which he had turned down. The tone of had been curt and the conversation short.
And that had been your only contact since that day in London. Before coming to Menton you had gone to Paris, to sign some papers and go through a few objects in your aunts’ apartment. You had not informed Timothée of this nor had you visited him.
Now here you are, weeks later, awaiting his arrival; foot tapping nervously against the floor, eyes fixed without seeing, mind recklessly wandering. Soon he’ll arrive at the station and you try not to connect that fact with the terrible sense of doom that’s been growing stronger in your stomach these last few days. But it seems undeniably connected.
Doom, like things have already been set in motion, the faiths decided; beyond your control or demand.
You feel ungrounded, restless and unbound; like the light morning breeze can sweep you away at sea. Trying to get a hold of yourself you focus your eyes only to see the endless blue sky above you or endless blue sea in front.
The sense of temporariness, of insignificance, of irrelevance in the grand scale of things washes over you and nausea settles in the pit of your stomach. Sitting up straight in your chair, force your foot to stop stomping the ground, you close your eyes and inhale slowly.
From the open window kitchen, you can still hear Louise, your aunt's maid, playing the radio. The French pop tune playing is unknown to you plays but she signs along over the sound of cluttering plates and running water. Upon your aunt’s death had ended up unemployed and in search of a job. She had written to you in London, asking for a position, and you had taken her on.
A sea gull screams somewhere above and from your neighbour’s house you hear children playing.
The sun is warm on your skin; the stone floor warm beneath your feet.
Feeling calmer, you open your eyes.
but still all you see is blue.
***
Timothée travels to Nice by train with a third-class ticket.
The compartment is unbearably hot. He tries to lay as still as possible on the hard bunk bed, afraid that any movement will make him warmer. Trying to ignore the sweat forming on his brow he focuses on the rhythmic pace of the train moving underneath him, wishing it would lull him to sleep but all it does is leave him with a vague feeling of nausea. His fellow passenger in the bunk bed below is in the bathroom next door, violently vomiting and the retching sound is coming through the thin walls . The light above his bed keeps flicking, every other second leaving the already dim room, with its dark oak panels, in complete darkness.
And dying for a cigarette.
He’s hot and sweaty and he thanks his lucky star he turned down your offer to meet him at the station. The thought of seeing you again after all these months, no doubt radiant in the sunlight, like an angel in waiting for him; and then him, wearing sweat-soaked rags that’ll no doubt smell of bile and dust and liquor.
He’s glad he turned your offer down; wants to make a good impression on you, to show you that he has changed, that he’s no longer the penniless painter; that he has made a success out of himself. The exhibition had been an incomparable success, Le Monde had put him on the front page and Le Journal du Dimanche had written an entire feature on his use of the colour blue – which they had been dubbed “as revolutionary as Picasso’s blue period, making the viewer see the colour in a new light, almost as if for the first time. Never before have I’ve seen blue look so isolated and lonely”.
He wondered if you had seen it. He wants you to have seen it, to be proud of it; of him. To know, because you had to know, that it was all for you.
But lately fear had crept up on him. Like mold it had grown from a single thought; slowly and steadily until it covered everything, until it was a certainty he knew as well as his own name; a fact poisoning his every breath.
What if you didn’t love him anymore? What if, after all this time and suffering you found out that, actually, without all the hinders standing in your way you didn’t actually find him all that interesting.
He would be forced to go on his way, certain in the knowledge that you no longer loved him; instead of the current status quo of endless possibilities of the untraveled road, where anything can still happen. Where there is still hope. It had crossed his mind, the thought of just not going. To stay in Paris and paint and dream; safe in the knowledge that at one point the most beautiful woman in the world had loved him. Never having the possibility of that changing.
But it would be a cowardly thing to do, and whatever else he was he was no coward. But he also knew that there was no use pretending, he was not the same as he was when he met you. How could he be? He had been a planet, knocked out of its orbit, forced to find a gravity anew. And he had, it had taken time and pain and more self-discipline than he knew he had in him. He had dusted himself of and gone on with life. But when you left Paris the first time had felt safe in the knowledge that you loved him.
If you were to reject him now, it would only be because you found him lacking; disappointing.
The stranger retches in the bathroom again and behind closed eyelids Timothée can still see the flicking light. He pretends it’s a blinking star.
Lately he’s been reading less Hemingway, Fitzgerald and Dostoevsky; switched them for Nietzsche, Sartre and Aristotle. This new world of science and philosophy opening up a whole new world for him. It had set his mind to ponder about love and religion and of the whole galaxy too; about his place and role in all of these things.
Every day, several times over, he had wanted to call you. To tell you about his discoveries, read you abstracts from his books and ask your thoughts on it. He wanted to know what you made out of all these subjects, to hear where your opinions differed from his. He wanted to argue with you about them.
Yet every time he picked up the phone to call you, he had put it down again. He had felt silly, calling you about such mundane things. Didn’t want to bother you in your grief. He knew, had bought each new glossy copy of the Tatler with a shameful face, that you were going through a difficult divorce.
He didn’t want to complicate your life any further.
The stranger comes into the compartment again, groans loudly and shuts the door with a bang behind him before throwing himself down on the lower bunkbed.
“Fucking hate trains” he states.
“You don’t say” Timothée answers dryly. It’s stifling hot in the compartment and the other man has brought in the strong scent of bile back with him to mix with the stench of sweat.
The train takes a sudden turn and the man below groans loudly again. Timothée hears how he fiddles with something and then the click of a lighter. He asks the man for a cigarette and the he kind-heartedly hands him his entire package of Lucky Strikes. Perhaps as an apology for the smell.
The rest of journey is spent chain-smoking cigarettes until the late hour, the compartment a fog of smoke, until he finally falls into slumber somewhere after Lyon.
The next morning his travel companion, looking rather worse for wear but relieved that the train has stopped at last, helps him with his luggage as they depart the train.
A strange feeling of having been reborn settles over him as he blinks up at the sun, his eyes adjusted from the previous dark dimness of his coupé. The station is dusty and oven-hot but he strives forward through it, bag with his belongings slung over his shoulder. Just as he expected he’s arrived sweaty, with ruffled dirty clothes and a stench of bile and sweat lingers on him. It had most definitely been the right decision to turn down your offer to meet him at the station. And so, instead of looking for a taxi to take him to the great big house on the hills he makes his way down the cobbled streets in quite the other direction.
*
There’s nothing like the ocean to wash away the sense of filth. With a gasp he breaks through the water surface and forces large gulps of fresh air down his throat. The water is cyan in shade and the surface glitter under the sun. He wades his way through the water and back to the beach, sending a silent prayer that the posh hotel he’s snuck into won’t notice that he is in fact not a guest paying hundreds of Francs a night for the luxury of a private beach, complete with white sunbeds and linen-clad waiters ready to service your every whim, but in fact just a common free-loader.
The small rocks are scalding hot and under his bare feet but he makes his way through the white parasols and sunbeds, careful as to not disturb the suntanning guests, his shabby bag slung over his shoulder.
“I’ll be damned!” An American voice roars out and Timothée stops dead in his tracks, heart beating painfully in his chest; as if he was an animal, knowing he was about to be caught in the hunt. “If it isn’t my favorite painter!”
Slowly he turns around.
Underneath a white parasol, sprawled out on a sunchair; broad-shouldered, blond and suntanned, lay William.
Fuck.
William stands up and moves closer to him. “It is you! Man, what a surprise!” he bursts out in his thick American accent and claps him on his shoulder. Timothée just stands there, still with the feeling of being caught; trapped. William just smiles at him. “I was just going to grab an early lunch, care to join me?”
The hotel restaurant is situated on a terrace, making the most of the ocean view, azure blue sea glittering under the sun. The beach is full to the brim with suntanned bodies, sipping drinks under big white parasols. They’ve both changed out of their swimming trunks, William into a nice white day suit, freshly pressed of course. Walking behind him onto the terrace Timothée feels especially shabby in his worn linen trousers, albeit he’s currently wearing his only items of clothing not covered in paint splatters.
They are seated by the railings, a small white clothed table. They order margarita pizzas and beers. They small talk, filling up the blanks since they last saw each other.
Timothée tells him of his work, the successful exhibition, his newfound love of Nietzsche. About his reason for coming to Nice. William in turn tells him of how he changed his mind about returning to America, how he’s fallen in love with the Mediterranean, how life here has inspired him so much he’s taken up writing. In fact, he has already written most of his first book, and it is set to publish at the end of summer. He is now looking for a house, some permanency for the first time in his life. He will settle down here, he tells Timothée in a solemn tone.
Timothée well recognizes the signs of a man trying to escape from himself. He doubts very much if William is the type to ever settle, has no doubts in fact that next time they’ll speak William will have taken up an instrument set to join a band, or learn a new language ready to move country yet again. Timothée knows a drifter when he sees one.
But he doesn’t say anything, doesn’t try to warn the other man about the uselessness of attempting to outrun oneself, doesn’t advise him to instead make peace with the past and himself; knows that there is no use, that he'll find this out for himself soon enough. So instead he smiles, lights the last of his Lucky Strike´s and orders them some more beers.
They drink and talk, dream really, far into the afternoon as the sky changes from bright blue to nuances of powder pink and lavender. They dream up scenarios for William’s future; a summer spent in sunny Nice soaking up the sun, before setting to Capri in the autumn to work on a new book. They decide he should take a break in the winter to go skiing in Saint Moritz before returning to Nice in the spring, to finish up his book.
More beers are ordered, and subjects discussed, but when a longer silence takes place William leans back in his chair, a shy look on his face that makes him look more boy than man.
“So” he begins, and Timothée’s interests are piqued. The terrace is full of people by now, taking a late lunch or simply enjoying an afternoon drink, waiting for the sun to set and the real party to begin.
“So?” he offers, pressing the other man to continue.
William clears his throat, cheeks flushed, and not purely from the day spent in the sun. “So, you’re going to see her now?”
Timothée is not surprised by his question, had expected it since he told him why he was here, had expected the subject of you to arise. It felt inevitable. The subject of you too big to ignore.
“Yes” he says, putting out his cigarette in the ashtray. They’d bought new ones from the waiter many beers ago, the crystal cut ashtray between them filled to the brim with stumped out cigarettes.
“Yeah should get going soon really, she was expecting me this morning.”
Silence for a heartbeat, as the sky turns red, the sun almost setting.
“And it is true, what they’ve written in the society pages? She’s getting divorced?”
Timothée, not knowing what to do with his hands, lights yet another cigarette; even though his throat feels too dry; too tight. “Yeah” he manages to get out.
Silence again. William is keeping his eyes on the setting sun, seemingly lost in thought.
“Mind if I tag back with you to the house?” he says eventually. The words come out almost superiorly. Yet Timothée senses the fragile vulnerability under the arrogance. “I’d just like to say hi to her” he then adds in a softer tone. “Our last goodbye…” he trails off for a second and something like regret flashes in his clear blue eyes, “Look, I treated her abhorrently and I’d like to put things right, it’s the least I can do”.
And who is Timothée to deny either one of you that?
*
The ground is slightly unsteady under his feet as they stand outside the hotel, waiting for the taxi the porter had ordered. He had, perhaps, had one too many to drink. He sways from one foot to the other. It is just past midnight and he should have gone home hours ago.
And maybe he shouldn’t arrive at your first meeting in months, the first meeting post-divorce, absolutely wasted. A knot ties somewhere in his stomach.
And, he thinks as he slides into the backseat of the taxi, maybe he oughtn't to bring your ex-fiancé with him to said meeting. An ex-fiancé who had broken up your engagement days before the wedding, left you pretty much at the altar to marry someone else instead. Your first love.
The knot tightens harder.
He watches the city, now dark and full of people, pass by outside the window. As the taxi goes up the hills he tries to focus on the ocean outside; now the darkest shade of blue. The moon is yet to make an appearance to light up the evening. They drive up a final curve and finally Timothée can see it. The white house atop the hill is large and neo-classical in style, with painted mint-green shutters, currently open wide to let in some evening air, and up the white walls magenta colored bougainvillea climbs.
The lights are on and Timothée feels light-headed. He blames it on the drinks. He blames it on the day spent under the beaming sun. He blames it on the long journey there and the fact he slept so badly on the train.
He blames it on anything other than the fact that he’s starting to wonder if maybe he shouldn’t have come here tonight. If perhaps he should have stayed at the hotel, sobered up and after a good night sleep come here; bunches of casa blanca lilies in hand and a forged reason for his lateness on his lips.
And he definitely shouldn’t bring William with him.
Something twists painfully inside him and he feels a bit sick. Because he knows William is your first love; but what if he’s your greatest one as well. What if the two of you after reuniting again, found that there were still love there. You both had divorces in your past now, you both had money, and freedom. What if William wasn’t just your first love, but your greatest one?
He definitely shouldn’t have brought him here.
He watches with regret settled deep in his bones as the taxi drives away, and William is walking up the pebbled path to the front door. So Timothée takes a deep breath, throws his duffel bag over his shoulder, and forces his feet forward.
They ring the door and surprise hits him for the second time that day, when the door opens and Aunt Marguerite’s maid Louise stands there, wearing the usual look of disapproval as she takes in the state of him.
She sniffs with disgust. “You are late” she tells him with a stern tone, before stepping aside to let him enter. “Madam is on the terrace”. He drops his bag on the floor as she leads the way through the house, William at his heel. His feet feel like cement, but he keeps forcing them forward.
The first thing he sees as he steps out onto the terrace is the moon, now high in the sky, casting its reflection on the water below. Then, on a sunbed with your face towards the ancient blue spreading out in front of you; not directed to him. He sees you in the moonlight, curled up underneath a blanket, a glass of red wine beside you. The only light on the terrace the moon and candles, lit up around you.
Without turning to look at him you say, in a voice painfully familiar, “was beginning to give up on you. Thought you’d missed the train”.
“Sorry” he says, and it surprises him how calm he sounds; because he’s pretty sure something is exploding inside his chest. “Got a bit distracted.”
You turn to him then, a half-smile on your face that freezes immediately upon seeing who is standing behind him. Painful silence falls between you, heavy like a wet blanket, while the ocean roars beneath, its waves crashing against the rocks.
“Wills?” Your voice sounds so vulnerable it makes him want to weep, to go hide; to ask something holy for forgiveness.
“Hi baby” William answers and Timothée nearly whimpers, wants to look away but can’t seem to turn his eyes from the scene in front of him.
Your eyes are big and glossy in the moonlight as William moves closer. Nausea rises in Timothée’s stomach as he watches William sit down on the sunbed beside you; hands clasped before him like a schoolboy in church.
“I’m sorry” he begins, “this must come as a surprise to you but…”
“Excuse me” you interrupt him, voice cold but your vulnerability clear as it. “I think I will retire to bed. You can stay over if you wish, Louise will prepare you a room. We’ll lunch tomorrow.”
And all either Timothée can do is watch as you stand up, spine all straight and head held high as you walk past him, not casting him a single look as he hangs his head in shame.
*
Timothée blinks slowly into the bright light; confused as to where he is for a moment. He blinks a few more times, his lasting impression; white. White sheets, white walls, white lilies on his bedside table, white wooden floors and white curtains moving in the breeze from the open balcony door; outside of which azure blue sky. Then,
Menton.
You.
He groans, burying his face in the pillow. The pain in your eyes as you walked past him the night before; eyes brimming with carefully held back tears. Why, why, why on earth had he brought William with him? Why hadn’t he just told him no? Surely it wouldn’t have been unreasonable to turn down his request to force his way back into his ex-fiancé’s life?
But he wanted you back. And Timothée had handed you to him.
“Fuck” he groans.
Despite his protesting, heavy limbs and sore head he stands up and moves through the room, to the gilded mirror by the antique dresser. Slowly he blinks back to his miserable reflection. A skinny man, with unruly, dark curls and anxious, wide eyes, dark circles like bruises underneath them. He thinks of William; tall and golden and broad shouldered enough to carry the weight of the world on them. And rich enough to own it.
He wants to hurl.
Instead, with the determination of the already damned, he moves through the room, knowing there is nothing left to do but face the day; and the consequences of last night. Finding a pair of clean linen trousers and white shirt he pulls them on with fumbling hands. Rooming through the pockets of the trousers he wore last night, carelessly thrown over a wicker chair, he finds the package of Gauloises he bought at the hotel the previous night. He puts them in his pocket, he is going to need them. Feeling like a man walking up to the gallows he steps out of his room.
Louise, who’s in the kitchen preparing breakfast, huffs in displeasure when she sees him.
“Yeah, yeah” he mutters, “I know”.
She pulls up her blonde hair and ties it in a knot in her back, seemingly doing her utmost to ignore him, but he’s pretty sure she’s just doing it for the opportunity to sneakily give him the finger.
Out on the terrace you sit by the table, reading. Wearing a white silky thing, your hair wet from a bath, pearls of water falling to the ground as you move to flip a page in your book. You are bathing in the morning light, covered by it; and maybe it’s just to Timothée’s eyes but everything else seems to fall into shadow.
Walking more assuredly than he feels, somewhat comforted in the fact that William is not yet up, he takes a seat beside you at the table. You flip a page in your book, and you don’t look at him. A seagull screeches in the sky, but otherwise the world remains quiet.
“What are you reading?” he asks, though feeling it is a trivial question in the midst of everything. He feels foolish, trying to ease into conversation with you, when all he really want to do is apologise; to take your hands and tell you that he’s sorry.
“The Odyssey”
“You like it?”
Your eyes don’t move over the page, but you don’t look at him either; instead fixated on the page in front of you.
“Yes” you say eventually. “But I find the prose hard to get used to”.
“Well” he says fishing in his pockets for his Gauloises, “personally I prefer The Iliad. There’s a feeling of doom in it that stays with you, like their fates are already set out for them and they can’t escape it. They’re left to just live their stories out”. He brings a cigarette to his lips but soon discovers he’s forgotten a lighter. He swears under his breath, the cigarette hanging from his mouth. Then something silver reflects in the sun, right before his eyes. You’re reaching out your hand to him, and in the palm of your hand lay a cigarette lighter. Gratefully he takes it and lights up.
“Thanks” he says, trying to hand it back to you, but you shake your head.
“No, it’s yours. Apparently, my aunt had it ordered for you before she passed. I was going to give it to you yesterday.”
Timothée feels as if he’s been punched in the stomach. He lays down the cigarette and looks down at the silver lighter. It’s beautifully crafted, old fashioned in a good way and thoroughly stylish. Marguerite through and through. He turns it in his hand and sunlight reflects from its perfect surface. Only then does he notice the engraved text, in cursive writing; “Fuck Picasso”.
He breaks out in laughter but feels a simultaneous need to cry. To lay down on the floor and weep. He misses her, would do anything to hear her scold him for his behavior again. To have her tell him that he is being defeatist and to keep trying; keep fighting for what he wants.
He looks at you, and he can see the same conflicting feelings reflected in your glossy eyes.
“Le petit dejeuner, madam” Louise says, putting down the tray with coffee, bread, brie and fresh fruit on the table between you. She sends Timothée a scorching look as she does so.
Once you’re both sipping on cups of coffee you clear your throat. “She did leave you the Picasso painting as well, you know”.
Timothée nearly drops his cup of scorching hot coffee in his lap. “Sorry?”
Reluctantly the corners of your mouth twist into a smile. “You never read the full version of the will, did you? She gave the Picasso to you. Said you were the only one who could possibly appreciate it”.
He snorts with laughter again, and again it comes with a sting of grief.
“You sure you don’t want it?” he asks, because a Picasso is no ordinary gift and he feels as if he’s stealing it from you; you who actually were related to the woman.
But you just shake your head, a small but sincere smile on your lips. “I got the Monet”.
“Bloody landscape artist” Timothée teases and you laugh. This is an old joke, an inside joke, one that has made you laugh before. Your laughter feels familiar and warm and he wants to pull you closer to him, feel your skin; warm from the sun, against his.
“You are just jealous” you tease back, and your eyes; the same colour as your aunts, sparkle in the sunshine. “You have never been able to paint a landscape”.
“No” he says, reaching for a stem or green grapes, “I’ve never found a landscape more interesting than a face” he adds, pulling the sweet fruit from its stem and placing it between his teeth; slowly biting down, relishing the taste.
He wants to say, ‘there’s nothing I’d rather paint than your face’, but swallows the words along with the fruit. He watches your face as you look at the sea; hair still wet against your now slightly rosy cheeks.
“Good morning” says a cheerful, though somewhat raspy, American accent.
Timothée turns and sees William walking towards you. He’s all tousled blonde hair, white dress shirt unbuttoned at the top; showing seamlessly endless amounts of suntanned golden skin. Styled with a Rolex watch and bare feet he’s all Hamptons; all American.
Timothée looks at him and thinks Paul Newman would be proud.
He picks up and finally lights his cigarette, using his new treasure.
William sits down by the table, leans back and sighs. “Gonna be a beautiful day” he announces to them, as if the weather was his to rule. Timothée watches him in the morning light, all golden and decisive. He thinks of Zeus, of power and of glory.
You gesture for Timothée’s cigarette package and he picks one out and hands it to you. Leaning closer, closer and closer still; your face so near that he can count each of your eyelashes if he so wishes, your arms nearly touching his. He lights you up. All the time he can feel William’s watchful eyes as he observes the two of you.
Louise comes out with another cup of coffee and places it in front of William before heading back to the kitchen. In the silence between them they can hear how she puts on the record player, the tunes of Chopin floating out on the terrace. Timothée meets your eyes and you both smile.
Flashes of memories from another life, you and him in Paris in his old studio. Dancing in the evening, hips pressed together as you’d swayed gently from side to side, your chest pressed to his, feeling so close it was as if you were sharing breaths. Or you posing on the carpet, naked in the afternoon light as he attempts the impossible; trying to recreate the loveliness and complexities of you. A Herculean task. All the while Chopin played in the background.
“So what are we all doing today?” inquires William and Timothée breaks eye contact with you. Maybe he is imagining it, but he thinks there’s a harshness behind Williams' forceful cheerfulness.
You enter into conversation with William, all small talk and politeness, as Timothée smokes his cigarette and looks the other way.
*
“Can I talk with you?” William asks, his hand around your wrist, holding you in place. “Alone, I mean.”
Your plates have been cleared, the coffee cups stand empty and William has reached over the table to take a hold of you. Timothée, who’d spent most of the breakfast in silence, his face towards the sea, playing with silver lighter in his lap, now stands up. “I’m off to explore the village” he says with a tone of indifference. But there is something strained about the way he’s holding himself, a tenseness in his shoulder, a frozen look on his face. It is in the way he refuses to look at either you or William as he walks away.
You watch him leave before gently pulling your hand away from William’s. “I must say, it is a surprise to see you here, Wills”.
William doesn’t hang his head in shame or embarrassment but keeps his clear blue eyes on yours.
“I didn’t know that you were here in Menton, that’s not why I came here. But I did go looking for you, in Paris”. His voice never shakes, neither does his hands. He is as steadfast as you remember him from school. Ha had been taller than everybody else, towering over them all. He could easily have been awkward, already standing out with his American accent. But he wasn’t. William had been born with a sense of self-assurance most could only dream of. Dubbed arrogant by some you had felt admiration.
Your school had been set up in two buildings, one for the boys and one for the girls, and separated by a field. Most classes were taken separately, the only times the genders had mixed was during meals and announcements, or on special sports days.
You can still remember it so clearly, when you fourteenth year old set your eyes on sixteen year old William for the first time. It had been on the football pitch during a friendly start of the term game. He was new to the school, a head taller than the other boys and no one seemed to be able to take their eyes off him. It was clear that he was unused to the game, having grown up mostly playing American football, but he soon got his head around the rules. You see it so clearly in front of you, how he had made his way through the defence, his long legs carrying him through in quick strides, before scoring his first goal; the whole crowd going wild. He was a natural talent, as soon you would learn, he was in most things. He took on the world with a natural ease, assured in his belief that everything would go his way.
At the end of the match he had stood there, arm slung around the shoulders of his fellow comrades, all grinning from ear to ear. They were the victors of the game; the heroes of the school. William in the middle, head slung back in laughter, almost radiant in the late September sun. He was and always had been golden, had always seemed more than human to you, almost godlike in being. The other boys had certainly found him so, the only exception being Freddie Fairfax and his friends, who never had a kind word to say about their fellow student. However the rest of the boys had soon made William their unelected leader. The king of god on mount Olympus. His eyes had met yours in the crowd of admirers and just like that - you were done for.
When he had asked you to the school dance, mouthed crooked in a smile and hands unstirred; so unlike the nervously trembling boys, you had said yes. The other girls had envied you and when you walked into the great hall with him he had taken your arm in his and kissed you on your forehead; told you he thought you were the most beautiful creature he’d ever seen. You had felt chosen; blessed even.
And when he had asked you to marry him, down on one knee like a gentleman and with a hand that didn’t shake with nerves, you had said yes. Had thought that had settled everything. That you would marry the man you loved in front of all your friends and family, securing a financially stable future for your parents. You’d go on a honeymoon, a world tour perhaps, and later; children. After having found the perfect family home in Kensington, among all your friends.
Alas, that was not to be. No wedding, nor children or home had come along. Instead, heartbreak.
And you had fled, humiliated, to Paris.
“Yes” you say, feeling unable to look away from his blue gaze. “Yes, Timothée mentioned that. I’m sorry I wasn’t able to meet you, I had already left for London by then”.
“Yeah” he says, corners of his lips turned up in a smile, but his eyes filled with something more like pity. “To marry Freddie Farifax”. And then he’s on his feet, moving around the table and before you know it, in Timothée’s chair. He leans forward and grasps your hands in his. They feel warm and steady, whereas yours are cold and shaking.
“Babe” his voice is like a gentle breeze. “Babe, look at me”.
You look up from your clasped hands and back into his blue eyes, at the moment more serious than you’ve ever seen them.
“I should never have left you” he continues, voice sweet and tender and barely louder than the breeze. “I was bewitched. I know, I know it sounds stupid but I just lost my head about Linda. I was a fool, a goddamn fool. I realized as soon as we left for New York that who I really wanted was you. It was like waking up from a dream. She was just such a lovely thing, so carefree and - no please, listen” You had tried to remove your hands from his but he kept a firm grip around them. Slowly he moves one of his hands from yours, up to your face to cup your cheek. It’s tender, and it feels like it had always felt when Wiliam touched you - the same feeling you got when you lay sunbathing; kissed by the sun. A mild breeze through the trees and the scent of him, citrus and cedar, hits you like an embrace from the past.
At fifteen, a few months after you first set eyes on him, he kissed you. Calmly, with a hand cupping your face; just like now, he had kissed you until you felt tender and starry eyed. It had been in the library, in the row furthest down, a copy of Anna Karenina sticking into your back as he pressed you against the bookcase.
He had smelled the same then, as you stood on your tip-toes to reach him his arms surrounded you.
He had smelled the same in baronessa Digby’s guestroom during her annual ball. After hours spent dancing, pressed up against one another he had snuck you both in there and on the bed showed all there was to know about love in its physical form. Flashes of memories come back to you of his body above yours, muscles defined and body almost golden in the candlelight, pressing you down onto crisp white sheets. The scent of lemon and cedar everywhere.
He had been gentle and patient, moving in and out of you with steady, slow thrusts at first, deliberate and calm in all his movements. His hands were steady the whole way through but you were shaking all over.
“I should never have left you” he repeats, and you can feel the shame coming off him in waves, see the regret in his eyes and in the furrow of his brow. “You never should have had to marry fucking Freddie, the piece of shit”. Something thunders in his blue eyes.
“I’m not angry with you William. I felt hurt and humiliated when you left but it’s all in the past now, so if it is my forgiveness you’ve come here for you can have it”.
“It’s not,” William says, almost before you’ve finished speaking. “I mean, I’ll gladly take it but what I want is you.” All you can do in response is stare at him and he laughs, almost bitterly, before continuing “to think, that had I not made such a massive ass of myself we would have been married now. We would be happy. I can still make you happy, baby”. He makes the last word sound like a prayer. He strokes your cheek.
“Make me carefree?” you ask, and you swear, you can feel the ocean move in protest in your lungs.
“Yes, just give me a chance and I’ll make you the happiest being on earth”.
You look into his pleading eyes. Part of you wants to say yes, because part of you still loves him. Part of you is still that fourteen year old girl, enamoured by the school hero. But you know now, have come to realize with time, that William never has, and never will understand you. Not you as you as you really are How could he understand someone so different from himself? A godlike creature whose hands never tremble, who has thunder in his eyes and whose love burns bright; but also quick. Would you choose a life with him there would be other Linda’s. Other infatuations, there was bound to be, even if he would always make his way back to you.
But though Wiliiam’s hands never tremble they know nothing of steady.
“William” you say, finally untangling your hands from his, “Will I’m sorry but it’s too late. I have already moved on”.
William leans back in his chair, a deep sigh escaping him. “Yes, yes I was afraid of that. The painter boy seems to have stolen your heart quite thoroughly, hasn’t he?” You don’t answer and William digs in his pockets for cigarettes.
“I see” he mouths out round a cigarette, brows furrowed in concentration. He brings his own silver lighter to his mouth to light up and it reflects in the sun, like bolts of lightning. “Still” he adds with a voice smooth as honey, leaned back in his chair; breathing out smoke between you, “well, he might get to keep the real you but I won the painting. Quite the consultation prize”.
***
When Timothée steps back into the house, several hours later the clouds are dark and heavy with unshed rain. The world feels charged with energy, as is the way right before thunder. Louise greets him with her usual disapproval at the door before simply nodding upward, uttering the single instruction, “upstairs”.
He makes his way through the house, dark and quiet in the late hour, up the stairs and drawing room. It is a large room, with wallpapers of navy dyed silk on which several paintings in the modern style are set up. Heavy oak furniture outlines the room, decanters of whiskey and cognac and any other liquor that could be wished for on one of the tables and in the middle of the room two elegant white sofas facing each other.
On one of them you sit, a martini at the table in front of you, next to an enormous vase of casa blanca lilies. The whole room smells of them.
Not knowing what to say, where to start he walks past you, across the room, to make himself a drink. Pouring himself a generous measure of Laphroaig, which he drowns immediately, before pouring himself a new one. Dutch courage.
“William gone then?” he asks, staring down at the amber liquid in his glas, hating how casual he sounds.
“Yes, he went back to his hotel”
So the supposed love of your life was only temporarily missing then. Timothée squeezes his eyes shut, clutching his hands around the table, as if to stop himself from whimpering. He feels pathetic and weak. Opening his eyes again, the room dark around him he walks to the sofa and sits down opposite of you.
Outside he hears the first few drops of rain.
“So you two patched things up then?” There’s a forged cheeriness to his voice and he hates how disingenuous he sounds.
For a few long seconds he is met by a silence so intense it makes the hair on his arms stand up. Then it really starts to fall outside, the sky opening up with rain, the clapping sound of it as it hits the roof like thunderous applause.
“I’ve decided to let the past be the past”. You’re so calm and collected; so cool and unfaced. Yet he can sense that you are holding onto yourself with an iron grip, not letting go an inch of your own feelings or reactions. It reminds him of the way children clutch their hands around objects they know they shouldn’t possess, determined not to show what they are hiding.
He takes a sip from the whiskey, the smokey smell of it mixing with the heady scent of lilies. So this was it then. He had ruined his own chance of happiness by bringing William back to you. Timothée had not been to compete with Freddie Fairfax and his money and title, but he had always known that you had not married that man out of love, and that had made the blow on his feelings less hard than if you had simply preferred Freddie; chosen him. But with William it was a different matter. You did not need to be with him out of any necessity. If you had chosen him; then it was because you loved him.
“Well, good on you” he says, drowning the rest of his glas. “Sweet of you to forgive him, you know, after basically leaving you at the altar and humiliating you infront of everyone you know. Really, it’s big of you”.
“Yes, me and William had a lovely chat this morning” your voice is cold as ice. You’re on the sofa, spine straight and shoulders tense, taking a large sip from your martini. “He told me about a poker game the two of you had in Paris. How you paid your debts with a nude portrait of me".
Lightning strikes outside and for a brief second the whole world goes white, like the flash of a camera, before once again leaving you both in shadow.
Timothée is dumbstruck; can’t get out a single word. He wants to protest, to deny it, but there’s no use. He’s never been a liar.
“How fucking could you?” The venom in your voice feels lethal, as if he’s injected it like poison and it’s making its way through his system.
And here comes the thunder.
“I trusted you with that painting and you let him fucking have it! My ex-fiance has a naked portrait of me because of you. I knew I couldn’t trust you, I knew it! It was all too good to be true. You just wanted me because you knew you couldn’t have me, because you knew it wouldn’t last. I was just a conquest you would get a few nice paintings out of!” You’re shouting now; unbound and full of rage. Unable to stand still you’ve gotten up, pacing the room.
“You knew it wouldn’t last?” he answers with a sarcastic laugh, anger shouting through him as well now. “You made sure it you mean? You used me as some sort of escape fantasy because you felt lost and trapped! The princess and the penniless painter. Those were just roles we played. You just wanted to feel desired again and no one has ever desired you as much as i have, but as soon as Freddie fucking Fairfax came along you dropped me, and guess what? I could have lived with that. I understood it even. But you made your way back into me, gave me hope, and now you’re fucking leaving again with fucking William!" He’s on his feet as well now, standing just feet from you. "So yeah, I’m sorry I gambled away the painting, that was wrong of me but don’t make out as if I’m the reason this can’t last when you have always been the first to leave. You have always been the first to leave!”
Lightning like a flash, capturing the hurt look on your face, burning it onto his retinas forever.
“You can say that all you want but you've had one foot out the door for a while, haven’t you? You never called or wrote after you left London. And when I called you early that morning there was some girl fucking giggling in the background! I had to go back to Paris this spring to sort out some of aunt's things and I didn’t go to visit you because I knew there was gonna be someone else there!”
And here comes the thunder again, louder than before.
“Oh that’s it sweetheart, jealous are we?” his tone is low and mocking and your eyes are burning into his. They seem to sparkle in the dark and though adrenaline is shooting through his body he can’t help but he can’t help thinking; that this is the most beautiful he’s ever seen you; unbound and unleashed. Despite his anger he’d like nothing more than to lean in and kiss you.
But he is angry, and so he continues in the same, low tone, “and you accuse me of having one foot out the door? Ye get jealous of some model coming in to have a painting done - who I’ve never even touched - but I have to watch your husband parade you on his arm at the opera? And be a spectator as you and fucking Wills reunite?”
“You’re the one who brought him here!”
“I know!” he shouts. Both your chests are heaving with anger, the air loaded with thunder. He takes a step back from you, runs a hand through his hair in frustration and sighs. “I know” he repeats, defeated now. Walking away from you he crosses the room and throws himself down on the sofa, his head in his hands.
Outside it keeps raining.
You sit down on your old spot on the sofa again, hands in your lap, cool and collected once more. “I have not gotten back together with William. I’m sorry I made you believe that. I’ve simply decided to forgive him and let the past be the past. That’s all”.
Timothée lifts his head up, something like hope blooming in his chest among all the despair. “Yeah? Well I’m sorry about the painting, I really am. In my defence, I didn’t know he was your William until after”.
“I guess it doesn’t matter now. I asked him to get rid of it”.
“Nevertheless, I am sorry” he looks you straight in the eye as he says this, wanting you to know the sincerity in his apology. “Do you want me to leave? I can go back to Paris tomorrow”.
Silence, then thunder once again, though this time further away.
“No” you say in the end, still in that cold voice, but you sound genuine when you continue, “no please stay. It is your house just as much as mine. Stay as long as you want”.
*
“Please, let me paint you again?”
Rain in July is a rare thing in Menton. Nevertheless, a storm had raged the night before. You had often heard the expression the calm before the storm, however you had always found the aftermath of storms all the more fascinating.
“No” you answer him, flipping the page in your book; Anna Karenina this morning.
Timothée is standing by the barristrade under the golden mimosa tree, trying to capture the landscape beneath him. He wears a frustrated, nearly pained look on his face as he stares at the canvas. You can hear his groans of ill contempt.
“Fucking hate landscapes”.
“That is your vanity speaking. You know you aren’t very good at it and so you hate it. Like all men you hate the things that make you look less than average". On the page in front of you Vronsky has decided to pursue Anna, despite knowing that she is a married woman.
“I’m not vain” Timothée mutters, like a petulant child. “I don’t like landscapes because they are ever-changing, just when you’ve managed to get the precise shade of the sky it has already changed into something else entirely.”
“But faces change all the time too. I’d say there’s as much variety in a face as it is in a landscape” you argue. Looking up from your book you observe Timothée. The mimosa branches hanging down, it’s golden flowers framing his head like a halo, the impression strengthened by the morning sun shining through.
The sweet, succulent scent from the tree, reinforced a thousand times with last night's heavy rain, hangs around them like an invisible cloud.
“You’re just defending landscapes because your precious Monet couldn’t have enough of them”.
“He painted people too”.
“Yeah, but he wasn't as good at is. Maybe he too was vain”.
”Monet never used black, did you know that?” You say, apropo of nothing. “And for a while Picasso only used blue. Do you think this is how they’ll define you one day? In a textbook, a picture of a portrait of me - and underneath it written in black on white: Portrait of a girl unknown. For this period in the artist's life he refused yellow. Is that how they will define you?”
“I don’t refuse yellow anymore.” He’s stopped painting now, but faces away from you, looking out at the ocean. You see his fingers twitch for a cigarette.
“Maybe not, but you don’t see blue in the same way. Neither does anyone else if Le Journal du Dimanche, I saw what they wrote about your exhibition, congratulations by the way.” His back is very still and you keep going. “What was it they wrote? ‘As revolutionary as Picasso’s blue period, making the viewer see the colour in a new light, almost as if for the first time. Never before have I’ve seen blue look so isolated and lonely’?”
You can’t explain even to yourself why you are doing it, why you are antagonising him. It is petty and it should be beneath you but like a child you try to goad a reaction out of him.
“You made me look at all colours in a different light.” It is a quiet confession, sincere in its simplicity. His hands are clasped around the brim of his chair, like he’s trying to hold himself very still. “You made me listen differently as well, I could never hear the beauty of Chopin until you played it for me. And the scent of lilies will always remind me of you. You made me feel different too, different from anybody else. Like I had been reborn into a new body, with new feelings. A new purpose. Even the air in my lungs felt different; cleaner somehow.”
You don’t know how to respond to that; feeling as though all malice has been sucked out of you like poison from a snake. Perhaps there’s nothing to say.
“Let me paint you one more time”
“No. Why don’t you just hire a model instead?”
“I don’t want another model, I just want to paint you”
“Well William’s still at the hotel if you’re planning to gamble it away after”.
Maybe all bitterness hasn’t escaped her yet. Timothée takes up his brush and goes back to his canvas. For a few long moments everything is silent.
Then, in a quiet voice he speaks. “Why didn’t you go back to William? I saw how much you loved him, when you first came to Paris. I remember. But if you’ve decided to forgive him, and if there’s still feelings there, then why not?”
“Is that what you want?”
“I want you to be happy”.
You throw the book on the table, close your eyes and lean back in your chair. “I’ve always figured that the world can be split into two; that people are either like birds, or like trees.”
You can hear Timothée dropping his paintbrush again and had you had your eyes open you would see his curious eyes as he watches you with open adoration.
“You see,” you continue “some people are drifters, and other settlers. Some people grow roots where they stand, trying to reach as far down into the earth as possible in order to feel secure. They are steady and they grow but they never change and they never change their outlook on things. And when they have to move, they have to be ripped out by the roots and it hurts. Others, well others are like birds. They fly from branch to branch and sure, sometimes they build nests but they never stay for long. They need air beneath their wings, they need freedom.”
“And William is a bird?”
“Yes, William is a bird. A drifter. He will always move from branch to branch. In his lifetime he will have a thousand infatuations and sure, if we were to marry I think he would always come back to me but I cannot live like that. I would be a tree, trying to force my roots through concrete”.
“And that is the reason you don’t choose him?” His voice breaks slightly at the end and you can’t help but love his fragility, his vulnerability in this moment.
“That yes” you say, opening your eyes and feeling blinded by the sun. “That and the fact that I’m not actually in love with him anymore”.
Silence again, because maybe there is nothing more to say now. Timothée picks up his brush and you take up your book and continue to read your book; ‘There can be no peace for us, only misery, and the greatest happiness.’
An hour or so later Timothée swears under his breath and abandons the landscape by walking out. Further away you hear the heavy front door close and you know he’s left for the village. You stand up and walk over to the painting, inspecting his work. He has painted the scenery in front of him, but despite the golden mimosa tree there is no yellow to be seen on the canvas; only various nuances of blue.
****
August, 1953
A routine settles at Villa Marguerite.
Each morning Timothée wakes before you and makes enough coffee for two. He takes his cup and his brushes out to the terrace and he tries to paint the ocean. Some time later the radio in the kitchen is turned on as Louise begins to prepare breakfast. Later still he hears your footsteps as you come out to join him on the terrace, wearing the same white dressing-gown each morning.
“There’s coffee if you want some”.
These words are his timid confession, his quiet ‘I think of you each morning as I wake’. A kind of ceasefire has settled between you. You don’t argue with each other but then again, you hardly speak.
When you come back out on the terrace, coffee cup in hand, you sit down under the golden mimosa tree and Timothée wants to sigh but he doesn’t. He wants to sigh, because you are beautiful. Because in the morning light, dressed in a white dressing-gown, you look more angel than person; the golden mimosa flowers like a halo atop your head.
Each morning he wants to capture the moment, just like you this, on his canvas. Not because of the etherealness of the setting; but the domesticity of it. You, morning hair and a cup of coffee that he has brewed for you; bare feet and nightgown.
You’re both silent as you drink. It is peaceful. In the village church bells ring. He feels no need for church. Heaven, he thinks, are mornings with you. Anything else can wait.
The rest of his days are spent painting, trying to catch the colours and moods of the ever-changing ocean and sky in front of him. By lunchtime he’s grown tired of trying, and so he walks down to the village where he strikes up a conversation with whomever is available. Nice is in high season and the streets are full of tourists. During midday however, when the sun is high in the sky, most people are hiding in whatever cool space they can find or lay their bodies on the beach. But Timothée finds he doesn’t mind the heat,
He’s made some friends during his time in Nice, foremost a fellow Parisian his age named Nathaniel, and an elderly French-speaking Italian named Marco. If Marco, who owns a bistro in the square, is available they play chess and argue about politics. Marco always wins. When Nathaniel, who works down by the docks, goes on his lunch break he comes to join them, and they eat together, whatever Marco’s bistro has to offer for the day. They share glasses of wine and discuss jazz, the two younger men unsuccessfully trying to convince Marco to arrange a jazz night at his bistro.
When the other men go back to their work Timothée strolls. Sometimes he walks down to the beach, where sometimes he runs into William. They chat, and it’s not exactly comfortable but neither is it awkward. They both get through it.
Some days he spends strolling the village, watching the pastel-coloured houses, dreaming about the inhabitants' lives. Other days he goes to the ancient little library in town, where he spends his afternoon strolling through the book shelves. He picks up books, reads a few chapters of them; though never starting at the beginning, before putting them down. Like this he goes from book to book, never being able to commit to a single story.
In the end he re-reads The Odyssey - the first page to the last. He doesn’t know what to think about it; except maybe that if The Iliad left him with a distinct feeling of doom, the feeling that sticks with him after The Odyssey is a distinct sense of homesickness. Of nostalgia.
He returns the book at the desk, asking the librarian for more books on Greek mythology. She hands him one and with the book safely pressed against his side he strolls down to the docks and there, on a bench overlooking the ocean, he reads. He reads until the heat fades and seagulls stop screeching and the sky turns pink and until all the fishing boats return to the docks.
He walks back to the village, pays for a box of pralines and a bottle of fine red wine to share with you on the terrace after dinner, and moves his feet towards home. All the time he thinks of Helen of Troy, of Persephone, of Aphrodite.
You eat dinner together and talk. You discuss The Odyssey at length. Debate about what is worse, to feel homesickness to a place you cannot return, or doom for the future. You tell him of a new play you’ve gotten your hands on, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof. You talk about the play in a way that has him enamored. He asks to borrow it from you and you lend it to him.
You share the wine and the pralines as the sky grows darker and the sounds of the waves crashing against the rocks louder. You drink and eat and talk until your eyelids grow heavy and it’s time for bed and Timothée thinks to himself that even if you are not his to kiss good night he can still have this. He counts it as a blessing.
Your bedrooms are located right next to each other and as he lay in bed reading your copy of Cat on a Hot Tin Roof in the dim night lamp light he can’t help but feel close to you, knowing that just on the other side of the room you lay sleeping. Like in all your books the pages are full of underlined lines scribbles, the corners of the pages dog eared and the spine cracked.
He turns the page and sees that you have underlined a sentence. ‘I’m not living with you, we occupy the same cage’.
He continues reading until the sun starts to rise outside, then he goes back in the story and underlines a sentence of his own. ‘One thing I don’t have is the charm of the defeated’.
*
Notes:
The last part will up up sunday/monday
also, please, if you've managed to get through this beast of a story please leave some feedback. I've been working on this for a very long time and I'd love to hear your thoughts.
So this was like… a year in the making? Honestly never thought it would be this difficult but here we are. Also, I don’t hate Picasso as much as it seems I do. Also, is the quote “There can be no peace for us, only misery, and the greatest happiness” in the book? Or is it just in the Joe Wright movie? My ex kept my copy of Anna Karenina and I can’t remember
Inspirations: Jenny Slate’s tweet about wanting someone to love her on purpose, my own quite frankly disastrous relationships, Johnny Cash saying paradise is “this morning, with her, having coffee”, Anna Karenina (I will defend the Joe Wright adaptation until death even though I know it’s no good, alright?), Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (OBSESSED with https://www.ntathome.com/packages/cat-on-a-hot-tin-roof/videos/cat-on-a-hot-tin-roof-full-play version, highly recommend renting it), Greek mythology, The Blue Train adaptation by ITV Poirot (season 10 episode 1, watch it, every episode is individually based on one of her books so no need to see it chronologically) that has been playing on repeat and also the fact that for the last month I’ve been thinking of nothing else than traveling to Italy, France and Greece again.
110 notes
·
View notes
Text
On that first viewing of the Icarus, if my notes and my memory are anything to go by, I missed the dead man. At the bottom of the field, in the bushes, barely visible, there is the top of the bald or balding head of a dead man. An old man. A corpse. Icarus may have been escaping, on a mad escapade; this dead man was never so fleet of foot. Perhaps it is proverbial (there are old Dutch proverbs about dead men and ploughs). Perhaps it is cryptic, a trace element of something strange. Bruegel liked to encode his paintings. It takes a moment to find Icarus, for one thing, and once you have him you can read all of Ovid in the canvas, near-enough. So here is a fragment of information that might be unspooled. A banal fragment. Death lies concealed in everything, we all know that. There is no project conceived, just as there is no human or indeed mammalian or vertebrate or eukaryotic child conceived or split off, that does not contain the miniature story of its own end. But containment works two ways: that which is contained is also isolated. Bruegel has trapped this little death demon in his painting, and can then, for a spell, walk away from it. Think of him now, the painting done (even if this is not his painting), a youngish, moderately famous man, walking around in the sunlight somewhere, in Antwerp or Brussels, greeting his neighbours, clearing the smell of oils and turpentine from his nostrils, catching some early spring, perhaps, watching the ships spread economical sail with their cargoes of pepper and worked cloth for Lübeck or Cadiz, his spirits buoyant on the soft airs. For a while yet.
Toby Ferris, from Short Life in a Strange World, on Bruegel’s The Fall of Icarus.
10 notes
·
View notes
Text
Weed delivery service
Fast, Free Cannabis Delivery and Weed Delivery service, Proudly serving Richmond, San Pablo, Hercules, Rodeo, Pinole, EI Sobrante, Kensington, and Albany
What is the Pinene Terpene in Cannabis?
Terpenes are natural hydrocarbons that existing as oils secreted in the tiny and sticky crystalized glands referred to as trichomes in marijuana buds that are additionally accountable for carrying most of the plant's cannabinoids. The terpenes grant the strong, extraordinary and fascinating smells and flavors that are so acquainted in cannabis. One of the most normal and outstanding terpenes in marijuana (and nature) is pinene.
What are Terpenes in the Natural World? Terpenes are discovered now not simply in cannabis, however additionally in nearly each plant throughout the planet that secretes fragrant oils. They exist for a range of reasons, however their two most important duties are to use their robust odors to repel predators whilst at the equal time entice bugs that are essential for pollination. Botanists have consequently a long way recognized over 50,000 exceptional terpenes in flora on Earth. Scientists have additionally remoted round one hundred fifty terpenes in hashish the place they can engage with cannabinoids like THC and CBD to create special advantageous results at some stage in the body.
Where to Find Pinene There are two isomers of pinene: alpha-Pinene (or a-Pinene) and beta-Pinene. A-Pinene is by means of a ways the most plentiful in each nature and cannabis. For that reason, when we are uncovered to or be aware pinene, it is nearly positive to be a-Pinene. It have to come as no shock that the aromatic pine terpene is discovered in nature in pine bushes and smells like pine needles or pine sap. It is additionally frequent in rosemary bushes, sage, dill, basil, parsley and lime and orange peels. Eucalyptus oil, juniper blackberries and tea tree oil additionally include pinene.
Apart from in nature, the two isomers of pinene are the key aspect of turpentine, which used to be used for lots of years as a cure-all for apparently each kind of ailment. The terpene is additionally used to taste merchandise and is put in perfumes, cleansing retailers and insecticides.
What Does Pinene Do? One of the most important alpha-pinene advantages is its effectiveness as a bronchodilator. That capability it widens the bronchi and helps hold the lungs clear; the pinene results are necessary to remedy for bronchial asthma sufferers. Pinene is additionally a verified anti-inflammatory and "is a doable candidate as a new drug to deal with a number of inflammatory diseases." The pungent terpene can additionally serve as an antimicrobial. This learn about files how it can fight the risky yeast Candida Albicans, a frequent reason of fungal contamination in the gastrointestinal tract of humans. Studies divulge that pinene produces an anti-depressive response in mice when blended with the terpene, linalool. There is mounting proof that a-pinene may additionally be tremendous towards Alzheimer's disease, amnesia, cognitive disorders, prevalent dementia and reminiscence loss. Pinene can mitigate the consequences of pores and skin harm precipitated by means of ultraviolet mild "probably thru its antioxidant property." It additionally inhibits pores and skin cellphone demise by way of stopping UVA-induced loss of mitochondrial membrane (key to telephone development) potential.
This sativa-dominant stress from Northern California typically has THC content material between 16% and 24% with much less than 0.3% CBD. It is justifiably famous due to its mellow stability between leisure and euphoric energy. Its mother and father are a blueberry indica and a sativa haze and it is regarded a accurate stress for novices due to the fact of its balanced effects. One of the best-known pinene strains, Blue Dream is additionally crammed with myrcene and caryophyllene terpenes.
Cannatonic
Cannatonic may be the most famous pinene-rich pressure for humans searching for the therapeutic homes (anti-anxiety and anti-psychosis) of CBD. With a one-to-one CBD to THC ratio, it offers a buzz that is perfect for beginners due to the fact of its brevity and lack of intensity. Some declare that its lineage commenced in Spain when NYC Diesel was once crossed with Reina Madre. Others agree with the Spanish beginning however declare it to be a go of the woman MK Ultra with a male G13 Haze.
Grape Ape
This robust indica-leaning pressure appears brilliant and provides an severe physique excessive thanks to THC tiers that can attain 28%. It is favored for its stress discount houses and heavy leisure elements. Sticky plants and a grape sweet scent dominate this incredible stress that comes from Purps, Skunk and Afghani heritage. Like Blue Dream, Grape Ape additionally enhances pinene with myrcene and caryophyllene. First-time customers need to begin slowly as Grape Ape's excessive is a bit of a creeper.
1 note
·
View note
Photo
My snake-bat (my snat? my bake?) for @muffinlance and Zuko/Li’s Book of Friends!
She’s specifically a mix between an african bush viper and a black flying fox. Her wingspan is over 1m and she can fly up to 40 km/h. She will drink nectar and pollen and fruits, supplementing this diet with occasional blossom of eucalyptus, paperbarks and turpentine trees. However, she is mainly an ambush predator, she hangs upside-down from trees using her prehensile tail and strikes at her prey like that. She prefers small rodents, birds, frogs and small reptiles. She’s extremely venomous and nocturnal.
119 notes
·
View notes
Text
headcanon 005. the arsonist.
rodolphus had many talents from the time he was a child to the present. those talents only grew and were perfected every day and night. corvus had done well in teaching he spells necessary but there was one in particular rodolphus had learned on his own. a favorite.
fire. flames. arson.
he’d found the spell in a book hiding in the bookcase of the lestrange manor. he didn’t need convincing to grab it and soak his mind with knowledge. it came so easily. it’s as though the spell was meant for him. as he continued reading, he read about the muggle way to cause fire. muggles were filthy but the idea of spreading gasoline toward a body also soaked in the accelerant was something he had to give the trash he fought everyday of his life. doing it this way would cause even more fear than a quick spell. anyone who knew rodolphus knew causing fear of others was something he thrived on.
as a child, he began playing with the spell, lighting everything from bushes to small rodents who held no worth. as with everything else he was masterful. at hogwarts he tortured muggleborn students into coming back from break with the necessary items to cause muggle fire. from there, his eyes brightened at the effects. they were better than he ever dreamed.
having his own ways to always have gasoline, matches, lighters, oil, kerosine, turpentine and paint thinner there was always something in his back pocket. he made sure to keep it up to date, getting a thrill when his stockpile overflowed.
all he had to do was find something or someone to set ablaze which wasn’t difficult but he enjoyed keeping this a secret. a secret that gave him an edge.
#it pours through my veins | about#animal torture mention tw#arson tw#torture mention tw#( it’s nothinng in depth and destroys my heart even typing it out because animals are my heart. but psychopath. )
5 notes
·
View notes
Text
guys I just want to show off ALL my gorgeous song-lyric lineages I’ve been steadfastly building on Dragon Cave over the last couple of years, see under the cut for virtual dragons in nice colour combinations and with their names making song lyrics
okay you gotta read these top-to-bottom and right-to-left bc that’s how Dragon Cave lineage pages work
here’s the first one I did - nice and quick and easy because Amarillo by Gorillaz is such a damn short song (in a ‘staircase’ style lineage) - ignore the green dudes at the beginning lol. it’s Geode and Moonstone dragons
then I did my first proper ‘even gen’ lineage with another song with ridiculously short lyrics, the excellent Billabong Valley by King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard, and Yellowcrowned and Turpentine dragons. this is the only even-gen where I’ve managed to fit the whole lyrics into only 4 generations, the rest are 5 gen
next was Epitaph by King Crimson with Black and Striped dragons, you can see that Stripeds take on the colour of the other parent so past the first gen they’re black Stripeds rather than white, and also I did this as a mirror-image wrt to the patterns of where the breeds are rather than each gender always being the same breed... a bit over-complicated and the colours aren’t really that satisfying but whatever
now these are lovely colours. Glaucous and Morpho drakes with the lyrics to the equally beautiful song Revere Reach by William D Drake (see what I did there?), which satisfyingly were also the exact right length for it to work
at some point I started another staircase lineage with just the first verse of Under Ice by Kate Bush with Ice and Azure Glacewing dragons. it’s nearly finished I’m just waiting for the final pair to produce a (much, much rarer) Ice egg instead of the Azure you see at the end there. this one has been going for over a year lol
this next one vexes me for two reasons, most of all i actually hate the colour combination, and also the lyrics were just slightly too long to fit so it’s missing the last 2 lines. but at the time I was so obsessed with Solar Waltz by Cosmo Sheldrake that I was determined, and I wanted to pick dragon breeds which fit the themes of the song so Sunrise and Terrae it was
we return to glorious, ethereal, beautiful form with these Carina dragons forming part of Cosmia by Joanna Newsom (it’s Joanna Newsom, man, the full lyrics are hundreds of words). Carinas are a hybrid breed from Ridgewing and Nebula dragons, and both of those breeds have two colour forms, so, well, you can see what I’ve done with the first gen :D and then the rest is all Carinas because the males and females are slightly different colours anyway and they’re beautiful
finally I’m gonna give y’all little previews of two of my in-progress lineages, which happen to BOTH be Kate Bush lyrics again cus I love her. (I have a third one but it’s a double-staircase structure which doesn’t make any sense until it’s complete lol)
this is the top half of The Dreaming by Kate Bush, with Daydream and Pink dragons forming a lovely pastel palette I’m very pleased with. (sadly, the last dragon’s planned mate doesn’t exist yet, because her father is just an egg so far XD)
and this is the top quarter of Sunset by Kate Bush, with, of course, Sunset and Lihnsehyre dragons, also fucking gorgeous!
i put a lot of planning into these, I find it a really fun and satisfying little hobby :D I’ve been using Dragon Cave on and off since I was 13 so I know my way around by now! I can’t recommend it highly enough, it’s the most relaxed and low-maintenance adoptables website I know of and you can do cool shit like this if you want!
I also have a bit of an obsession with Prize dragons, I trade for the offspring of other people’s (can’t get the original ones unless you win a raffle!) and then mate them together to produce cool shit like this lineage (a double-staircase like one I’m trying to build at the moment, they take a fucking long time from scratch!)
here’s my actual dragon collection if you wanna look. they’re nearly all named after songs/albums of course
2 notes
·
View notes
Text
8/20/2023
Afternoon Songs
Thyme: Time
Raining In Idyllwild
A Tropical Storm
It Feels So Good
To Nourish Our Earth
Raining In Idyllwild
A Tropical Storm
Not A Hurricane
Afterall
Why Women Always
Pass On Their Names
To Natural Disasters
I Want A Star
For My 50Th
Named For Me
#Nitya4Eternity
My Civil War Activists
Nitya X
#Nitya4Eternity
Needs A Charity
For All Of Us
#Nitya4Eternity
Malcom X
Nitya X
Britney X
Cares Dear
I Want You To
Be A Free Bird
Camping In California
Or Mother Maui
If You're Too Frightened
Come Here To Serve
But Too Afraid
Of A Storm
Maybe Mammas
Need A Better
Defense Team
Qualified
Quantified
Too Afraid
Of A Summer Storm
What Might It
Wash Up
Too Afraid Of A Summer
Storm
Why Is That Love
Too Many Skeletons
Buried In The Dessert
Too Many Skeletons
Come Unearthed
In This Weather
Not Hurricane Hilary
Afterall
Too Many Skeletons
In The British Closet
Commonwealth
Canceled Games
They Don't Wanna Be
Part Of Your Agenda
Got The Huntley Castle
In Scotland
If You Need Somewhere
To Go
Rebuild
With Billions
For Integrity
Elon X
"O"
Show
Tropical Storms
Maybe Not
Cold Cold Cold Rain
In Kilts
You Know
Naked Legs
Huntley Tartans
Red And Blue
Green Plaids
Warmies
Hike
Rain Or Shine
Wits Abound
Sport
But What We All Know
Is That We're Not
Going To Play Your Wars
No More Trauma
Bonding
Worst Time Of Our Life
No More #NonceCharles
King Henry
No One Wants Your
Strife
We Didn't Hire
Secret Service Spies
To Seduce
And Lie
We Didn't Hire
Social Workers
Bribed Officers
We Didn't Hire
These Gays On Bribes
We Didn't Hire
The Bush Administration
We Didn't Hire
Schmitz Eunuchs
Trumpleberry
Landlord
Celebrity "Social Media" Scammers
We Didn't Hire
The CHINESE To Take
Our Reigns
We Didn't Hire Them
But Morgellans
Spike Proteins
Sprouted Out
Of Covid Variants
Anyways
At Hospitals
We Didn't Hire
Your Courts For Medical
Advice
Invite
Them To Practice
Medicine
On Us
We Got That Covered
Take Some Thyme
Ivermectin
C And Zinc
Slow Home Cooked
Tiffin
Picnicking
Take Some Time
Hydrochlorinine
Take Some Time
Turpentine
For Your Loved Ones
And Think Of Me
Take Some Time
Before You Die
With Trinity
Goddess And Me
Mammas
Dr. Kazi Pleas
Take Some Thyme
N.D. Said
Take Some Time
Honey
With Your Kids
Parents
God Children
One Things For Sure
Someday
We'll All Be
Dead
It's The Physics
Reality
Peace-
Nitya Nella Davigo Azam Moezzi Huntley
Rawal
0 notes