For a moment he waited, feeling at the stillness. The shadowy god beneath his heels seeped into their surroundings, roused and focused. Something of Adal’s wayward charm had caught the old poet's attention. A sign of things to come, he thought. Felix gazed into their half blinded eyes, lamenting the darkness that eavesdropped on their every word (, and on the secret fluttering of his chest.) The torment he brought upon the world by means of his own deathlessness, of existing where he no longer belonged, but was crammed into being by merciless hands. A part of him wished to reach out then, and warn the other man as an augur would a warrior on their way to folly. But the pause and the brief softening of his expression was all that Mischief would allow. Tactfully, he glanced down at his heels and kicked at the remnants of a stubbed out cigarette.
“Music’s the temporal ordering of sounds and silences that establish rhythms and harmonies.”
Cold, unfeeling, words wholly unbecoming of an artist. Yet there was an unmistakable sense of clarity to them, like the ticking of a metronome timing his breaths. In reality, Felix believed the stolid and technical minutiae of the arts to be as warm as flesh. There was no less feeling in the counting of beats-per-minute than in the thudding of one's heart. Life started in that same fashion, after all, in the thoughtless drumming up of blood and in the clanging of primitive synapses. “It’s in the birds trilling before the sunrise. In the wind and trees. In the breath and voice of every person you’ve met. The pattern of all living things. Whether by design or by happenstance, music is everywhere and in everything.”
His hands toyed with the bottle between his thighs, tearing at the label with red colored nails. “That being said, while I appreciate all kinds of music and musical experiences–” He frowned, strengthening the pout that was ever on his face. “The radio here’s starting to wear me out.”
It had all but driven him mad. He’d never so disliked a station and its host before. Pompous and false in every sense of the word. A wretch sat high upon his tower, observing the going ons of his domain and its people like specimens he’s kept in a glass case. An insufferable man, and with such little respect for music that he lazily puts the same couple of tapes in rotation. Why use the station at all then? Why have the families play it through their speakers? Was this a new form of torture?
“That's what I wanted to get at, actually.” A shy admission, accentuated by the subtle reddening of his cheeks. Felix tried never to complain about the conditions of his stay. A bed at Gomorrah was better than lying on the cold, hard ground anywhere else. But especially out in the Mojave. The people were desperate in the desert, splitting at the seams for an escape, no matter how brief or how grave the consequences. For them or himself. A dangerous game to play with an eager thing like Mischief around, always scheming for its next bit of fun…Though Felix paid for his current shelter on hard terms, it was better than suffering the revelries of his god each and every night.
Every few nights would do.
“The same couple of songs, the same, grating voice flaunting his power in between tracks. I don’t know what’s worse, the monotony or the fool pretending to be a genius. I wish it would stop.”