âiââ he hesitates. people donât like when you speak ill of the present. the past can be bad, the future can be uncertain, those are allowed. but when you speak of the now, you better show respect. david scrapes his tongue against his upper teeth, furrows his brows in concentration. and then decides to go ahead: âi sometimes hate being here. not with youâ !! no, just, in the moment. when the clock is ticking and i hear every sound it makes even though, i donât, i donât want to.âÂ
the boots in his hand swing wildly when he twists his torso to address constance properly, staring at her with wide open eyes:Â âi donât hate your now, i promise. your present isâ itâs nice.â he doesnât want to offend. stepping onto the grounds of this estate is dangerous, yes, but it also brings silence david rarely gets to hear.Â
maybe heâs being selfish. maybe heâs here only because the blackwood estate is like a pocket of air to him. but when he nods at constance, he means it:Â âwe should burn something then. for them. like a vikingâs funeral.â it seems fitting. he knows the past davids had to fight like hellâ and he feels like past constances know something about that as well.
he sounds like MERRICAT sometimes. burning something for them. constance does not know all of merricatâs rituals, why she buries things and nails them to trees and always goes to the woods on certain days at certain times. perhaps thatâs why merricat dislikes david - though she dislikes all company. âi donât want to, either,â she replies and settles down on the ground from her kneel. garden-glove clad hand pats the ground beside her, just once, in an open invitation for him to come sit somewhere on the lawn. âsometimes.â
it isnât ALWAYS. it isnât as though she drifts through each and every moment full of dread. it is more like the moon behind clouds, flashes of it peering through intermittently, whenever the breeze is strongest. always there, sometimes HIDDEN. constance doesnât smile at david and thinks quietly on his words. âsome days i imagine just lying in bed until i have wasted away to nothing,â itâs said like a secret, like words pressed into a diary rather than spoken into the soft wind as she watches him and his boots. âbut then i remember.â UNCLE JULIAN AND MERRICAT AND THE HOUSE AND THE GARDEN AND THE PRESERVES BENEATH HER FEET AND THE STORY ABOVE HER HEAD. itâs all there for her to care for. what would it do without her? besides, she would have to make merricat waste away, too. constance couldnât just LEAVE HER.
âwhat do you think we could burn?â she asks as gaze turns from him to peer about the garden. none of the plants, of course. she tends them too well to ever let them burn. âsomething for them, one for you and one for me. or...the past yous and mes.â